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CB
12-02-2006, 08:32 PM
AFGHANISTAN: RECORD OPIUM CROP SOURCE OF CORRUPTION, REPORT


New York, 29 Nov. (AKI) - Efforts to combat opium production in Afghanistan, a 3-billion dollar-a-year trade accounting for more than 90 per cent of the world's illegal output, have been marred by high-level corruption, with this year registering a record increase of some 50 per cent, according to a United Nations report released Tuesday. "We are talking about links between the industry and the Government, potentially the Parliament and other official institutions," Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan Christopher Alexander told a news conference in launching the report in Kabul, the capital.

“We are not here talking about an abstract or fictional government – we are talking about this government. And it will be important for this government to recognize that fact and to energetically address it,” he said of the report compiled by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime ( UNODC) and the World Bank.

Without progress on the opium front it will be “extremely difficult” to tackle the other two challenges facing the country, fighting violence, insurgency and terrorism, and building state institutions and improving governance, Alexander stressed.

The seven-chapter report – Afghanistan's Drug Industry: Structure, Functioning, Dynamics, and Implications for Counter-Narcotics Policy – cites the opium economy as “a massive source of corruption” and the country's largest source of export earnings.

UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa, in a statement called for quick concrete results, for example by doubling the number of opium-free provinces from the current six in 2007.

“I therefore propose that development support to farmers, the arrest of corrupt officials and eradication measures be concentrated in half a dozen provinces with low cultivation in 2006 so as to free them from the scourge of opium. Those driving the drug industry must be brought to justice and officials who support it sacked,” he said.

The report says that, far from leading to sustained declines in total national cultivation, success in reducing cultivation in one province often leads to increases elsewhere, or cultivation in the province itself rebounds in the following year, as occurred in Helmand province after 2003.

Eradication campaigns affect poor farmers and rural wage labourers mostly since they lack political support and are unable to pay bribes, while wealthier producers pay to avoid having their crops eradicated, greatly reducing the effectiveness of counter-narcotics measures and gravely undermining the credibility of the government and its local representatives.

This year’s harvest reached an all-time high with total cultivation increasing by 59 per cent and production by 49 per cent, with the bulk concentrated in Helmand and a few other highly insecure and insurgency-ridden provinces. Yet, even in this record year, opium takes up less than 4 per cent of total cultivated area, with 13 per cent of the population involved. The opium economy accounts for around one-third of total economic activity.

Developing alternative livelihoods takes time, and expectations of what can be achieved in the short term need to be realistic, the report notes, arguing that there is a strong case for focusing initially on interdiction efforts against drug traffickers and their sponsors.

UNODC Country Representative and report co-editor Doris Buddenberg told the Kabul news conference that the countries where there is the highest demand for opium are Iran and Pakistan. Europe runs third with Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom as the main consuming countries. Demand is also rising in Eastern Europe and particularly Russia.

She said the issue of high-ranking officials involved in the drugs trade was “one of the most difficult aspects,” noting organizations both inside and outside of the UN believe that not enough has been done to deal with it.

LINK (http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level_English.php?cat=Security&loid=8.0.364303335&par=)

WilliamClarkeQuantrill
12-02-2006, 09:40 PM
Eradication campaigns affect poor farmers and rural wage labourers mostly since they lack political support and are unable to pay bribes, while wealthier producers pay to avoid having their crops eradicated, greatly reducing the effectiveness of counter-narcotics measures and gravely undermining the credibility of the government and its local representatives.

Sounds like any government bureaucracy. Industry and government working hand in hand to keep the little man down.

This year’s harvest reached an all-time high with total cultivation increasing by 59 per cent and production by 49 per cent

good growing :smokin:

CB
12-02-2006, 09:47 PM
even in this record year, opium takes up less than 4 per cent of total cultivated area, with 13 per cent of the population involved. The opium economy accounts for around one-third of total economic activity.

:eek:

The Hooded Claw
12-04-2006, 04:16 PM
This increase is due to the Taliban being underground as we all know. Before troops were there the farmers were always a year behind in debt to the Taliban, or to put it simpler the Taliban gave loans to farmers far beyond the farmers abilty to grow and repay, so the Taliban took each years crop for the debt incurred but also plunged more dolars at the farmers so they were always in arrears and unable to ever settle the debt.
Of course the Taliban always won and obtained their black tar cheaper than anyone on the planet.

Strange that the goverments are there eh? Bells of Vietnam are ringing not to mention the oil fields of Iraq........

Air America?

drumin
12-04-2006, 10:24 PM
Sorry dude but you are a bit confused. The Taliban outlawed poppy farming, Sharia law forbids such intoxication and the Taliban are conservative/fundamentalists as well as brutal enforcers. We took out the Taliban which allowed the poppy farmers to grow again. Thanks to Bush and his failed policies, now we have the increased poppy production AND the Taliban back in force in Afghanistan.

CB
12-04-2006, 10:45 PM
seems to be a big part of there economy thats fer sure :D

sombro
12-05-2006, 12:41 AM
I'm also sure the rise in poppy crop is to do with the (public) demise of the Taliban. The problem is that with any war there are two fronts to be fought and both are equally important. Misinformation during wartime has been the rule rather than the exception throughout history.

Therefore we are led to believe that the Taliban, instead of being the heroic resistence against the Red menace that Reagan knew and loved, are evil drug-peddling, women-hating goat herders, endlessly plotting ways to bring down the west from their hillside caves.

I'm not saying they're angelic or innocent, it's just difficult to know what to believe really when we're all treated like mushrooms by our respective governments, kept in the dark and fed on shit!

drumin
12-05-2006, 07:07 AM
The facts are out there, sometimes it's harder to find than other times depending on how much the government wants to hide from you. :mad: You have to sift through the propaganda and conspiracy theories but you can usually piece together a pretty good idea of what's happening.

The Hooded Claw
12-24-2006, 06:07 PM
are evil drug-peddling, women-hating goat herders
Goat shaggers too don't forget!

I ain't one for politics unless its Africa or Russia so I can't stand by omn a soap box with remarks, but, my remarks are only what I seen on a CH4 documentary and if anyone's not gonna be influenced by politics, its CH4.....
I can still picture the programme and at least two poppy farmers in my mind now, talking how they were mafiossa'd by the Taliban....

XStreme
04-19-2007, 07:30 AM
I've never once seen Opium in my life...I've always been somewhat interested in it though...seems like an interesting substance.

Dooby420
04-19-2007, 09:58 AM
Just gonna throw my 2 cents out there on this:

Afghanistan has been, for many decades, if not longer, the leading national producer of the world's opium supply. As a matter of fact, the area of and surrounding Afghanistan is collectively known as the "Golden Crescent" regarding opium production. Drumin bro you are correct in saying that the Taliban did outlaw opium cultivation due to religious beliefs, but I'm sure poor Afghani farmers still grew their crop regardless of government policy (sounds kinda familiar eh? :p)

It is no suprise that opium cultivation has seen such a sharp increase. Between coalition troops fighting to secure the country and the Taliban insurgency trying to regain its former power, a state of "anarchy" exists, in which the general public is basically free to do whatever they want. Now, the chemical transformation of opium into other more dangerous narcotics is a different story.

Again, just my 2 cents :2cents:

-DooB

Fred Lemonjello
04-26-2007, 08:33 PM
Read this the other day.........

Taliban Taxes Opium To Fund Insurgency

By JASON STRAZIUSO The Associated Press
Published: Apr 13, 2007


CHINAR, AFGHANISTAN - When the Taliban ordered Afghanistan's fields cleared of opium poppies seven years ago because of Islam's ban on drugs, fearful farmers complied en masse.
Today, officials say the militia nets tens of millions of dollars by forcing farmers to plant poppies and taxing the harvest, driving the country's skyrocketing opium production to pay for the fight against what they consider a greater evil - U.S. and NATO troops.
"Drugs are bad. The Quran is very clear about it," said Gafus Scheltem, NATO's political adviser in southern Afghanistan. But to fight the enemy, he said, "all things are allowed. They need money and the only way they can get money is from Arabs that support them in the [Persian] Gulf, or poppies."
Corrupt government officials, including low-level police and high-level leaders, also protect the drug trade in exchange for bribes, a recent U.N. report found. Warlords and major landowners welcome the instability the Taliban brings to the country's southern regions, causing poppy eradication efforts to fail.
The Taliban denies it supports poppies. Mullah Abdul Qassim, a top commander in Helmand province, told The Associated Press last month that the militia's goal is to defeat foreign troops and it doesn't have time to regulate poppies. He noted that the militia virtually eliminated poppies after leader Mullah Omar banned them in July 2000.
Diplomats at the time thought the Taliban, pariahs because of their violations of human rights standards, was seeking international respectability and financial aid. Washington sent $43 million in emergency money to Afghanistan after poppy growing was banned.
But Western officials say it appears the ban was meant at least in part to increase the price of opium stockpiles.
'That's The Hypocrisy Of It'

"Originally they said 'It's bad for you, it's against Islam,' but when they realized how much money they could make off of it they said it was OK to grow but not consume it. That's the hypocrisy of it," said Spc. Zach Khan, a cultural adviser in the U.S. Army who was born in Pakistan and lives in Nashville, Tenn.
The Taliban also is telling farmers in the south they must grow poppies but if the militia returns to power, the plants once again will be outlawed, said a Western official familiar with Afghanistan's drug trade who asked not to be identified.
Afghanistan's opium crop grew 59 percent in 2006 to 407,000 acres, yielding a record crop of 6,100 tons, enough to make 610 tons of heroin - 90 percent of the world's supply, according to the United Nations. Western and Afghan officials say they expect a similar crop this year.
The street value of the heroin was estimated at $3.5 billion, said Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime. Of that, Afghan farmers earned an estimated $700 million, while the bulk of the rest went to traffickers who smuggled the drugs to the Middle East and Europe.
No one knows the Taliban's take from poppy cultivation, and guesses range from the low tens of millions of dollars to an estimate of $140 million by Gen. Khodaidad, Afghanistan's deputy minister for counternarcotics. His figure was based on Taliban taxes that could add up to 20 percent of the farmers' $700 million.
The Taliban uses the money to buy weapons and pay soldiers, and as one Western official put it: "You can buy quite a bit of insurgency for $10 million."
Religious Tax Paid To Taliban, Farmer Says

In Helmand province - the Taliban's main stronghold - poppy farmer Karimullah Khan said the traditional religious tax, called an oshar, used to be paid to religious leaders. Now, he said, "If the government is weak in some districts, and the Taliban is stronger, we give the oshar to the Taliban."
For farmers, poppies pay up to 10 times as much as wheat. Militants protect the poppy fields, and corrupt government officials are paid to turn a blind eye.
"The Taliban need the money and the narco-traffickers need the instability. In chaos, there's profit," U.S. Army Lt. Col. Brian Mennes said during a recent mission in southern Afghanistan.
The Taliban takes a cut all along the way - a percentage at harvest, at heroin labs, and to ensure the crop's passage through dangerous lands, Costa said.
"Now if you put all these percentages together, out of an opium economy of about $3.5 billion, you get a significant amount of money which could be potentially seen as the funding of terrorism," Costa said.
Of five poppy farmers in southern Afghanistan that spoke to The Associated Press, three paid bribes to the Taliban and to local police, who work for the Afghan Interior Ministry, which a U.N. report said has many officials involved in the drug trade.
Some farmers paid in opium, others in cash. Two farmers who live in more secure areas paid local clerics a 10 percent religious tax.

Mr Burns
05-25-2007, 04:16 PM
Just gonna throw my 2 cents out there on this:

Afghanistan has been, for many decades, if not longer, the leading national producer of the world's opium supply. As a matter of fact, the area of and surrounding Afghanistan is collectively known as the "Golden Crescent" regarding opium production. Drumin bro you are correct in saying that the Taliban did outlaw opium cultivation due to religious beliefs, but I'm sure poor Afghani farmers still grew their crop regardless of government policy (sounds kinda familiar eh? :p)

It is no suprise that opium cultivation has seen such a sharp increase. Between coalition troops fighting to secure the country and the Taliban insurgency trying to regain its former power, a state of "anarchy" exists, in which the general public is basically free to do whatever they want. Now, the chemical transformation of opium into other more dangerous narcotics is a different story.

Again, just my 2 cents :2cents:

-DooB

I'm pleased you come in with that Doob cause I thought I were going mad! You know, 407K acres isn't a huge area and especially when you consider that he farmers are scattered.

Maybe because billions are being spent on this war that other departments such as drug trafficking enforcement have suffered, and the increase on heroin use will be put down the Muslims breaking the korans rule? It 'could' be propaganda, and who's to say what's the truth either way?

Rag heads will do what they need to do when they have to do it. Period.

Grinnin
06-01-2007, 07:36 AM
I've never once seen Opium in my life...I've always been somewhat interested in it though...seems like an interesting substance.

Are poppies like pot plants? Is opium a bad thing like I feel crystal meth is?
I ask this because I find it interesting and am wondering could/should I grow it and how is it processed and used by the person? Is it smoked like weed or eaten or does it have to be produced by a complicated means like cocaine?