Pubdate: Thu, 16 Nov 2000
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company
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Author: The Associated Press

TALIBAN POPPY-GROWING BAN WILL MEASURE AFGHANS' FEAR

KHOGIANI, Pakistan— Zulmai Khan has planted wheat instead of poppies this 
year, and expects his income to plunge to $400 from $10,000.

For Mr. Khan, it was switch or go to jail. Like many other Afghan farmers, 
he finds himself at the sharp end of an edict from the Taliban government, 
which has decreed it un-Islamic to farm poppies for heroin production.

"Of course it's because we are afraid," Mr. Khan said of deciding to 
comply. "That is the only reason. It wasn't against Islam before, so how 
can it be against Islam now?

The Taliban have aroused Western disapproval for their strictures on women, 
as well as for harboring Osama bin Laden, whom the United States sees as a 
terrorist.

But their uncompromising attitude toward drugs may win the Taliban some 
points, even as it tests the credibility of the Taliban leader, Mullah 
Muhammad Omar.

If the fields are awash with crimson poppies next spring, the reclusive 
Mullah Omar's claim of absolute authority will be debunked. But if his 
edict is obeyed, the world's biggest source of heroin will be cut off, 
reinforcing the Taliban's hold over a country ravaged by 21 years of war 
and lawlessness.

"I tell you, I think it can be done," said Shams-ul-Haq Sayed, an officer 
of the Taliban drug control office in Jalalabad, capital of the eastern 
opium-growing province of Nangarhar.

He pointed to the Taliban's success in controlling the number of weapons 
openly carried in the streets — even though there is no outright ban on 
weapons possession.

"Twenty years ago I would have thought it impossible to take weapons away 
from people," he said, adding that in every Taliban city, "people don't 
carry guns."

Last year Afghan farmers produced more than 4,000 tons of opium — more than 
the rest of the world put together, the United Nations says.

The edict in July was typical of the way the Taliban run the country: 
sudden, harsh and irrevocable.

"We were surprised," said Mizan-ur-Rehman Yuzufzai, a United Nations drug 
control officer in Nangarhar. "We had been talking to the Taliban, but we 
did not expect a total ban. But now they are bound by it."

Twenty-two defiant farmers have already been arrested in Nangarhar alone, 
Mr. Sayed said. Farmers are jailed until they agree to destroy their crop, 
he said. If they refuse, the crop is destroyed and the cost of destruction 
charged to them.

Stories circulate about farmers unsuccessfully defying the edict. A farmer 
who bragged of challenging it is said to have been paraded around his 
village with his face blackened.

But the ban coincides with the United Nations' decision to close its drug 
control program in eastern Nangarhar for lack of funding.

"Now our credibility with the people is under question," said Zalmi 
Sherzad, a program official. "They will say to us, 'You have no right to 
tell us not to grow. You give us nothing.' "
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