Pubdate: Thu, 19 Jul 2001
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2001 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Michael Slackman, Times Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

FOR LEBANESE FARMERS, WEED IS AGAIN THE CROP OF CHOICE

BEKAA VALLEY, Lebanon -- For seven years, Abu Mohammed tried to 
support his wife and five children by growing melons. But there was 
never enough water, and even when weather conditions were good, no 
one wanted to buy his produce.

So now he's cultivating a crop sure to sell: Cannabis sativa, the 
spiky, olive green plant used to produce hashish.

"To us, this is just a crop," Abu Mohammed said as he checked his 
plot, stretching the length of a football field alongside the main 
road in this sunburned valley in northeastern Lebanon. "I would 
rather plant melons, but customers are always ready to buy hashish."

The Bekaa Valley is nearly barren of crops; its irrigation channels 
are dry and filled with debris. But cannabis needs little water to 
grow, and after years of waiting for government assistance, many 
farmers here have turned to the illicit harvest.

They say that if the government tries to stop them, there will be 
bloodshed. "I am serious," said Ali, a 50-year-old with 11 children 
who, like other cannabis farmers, asked that his last name not be 
used. "If I am going to die, I want to die defending myself."

The resurgence of cannabis in the region is a serious problem for the 
Lebanese government. Faced with a crushing $28-billion debt, Lebanon 
is desperate to convince the international community that it is safe 
for investment. Production of illicit drugs will only hamper that 
effort, and could even lead to sanctions. But officials acknowledge 
that a crackdown will exacerbate economic tensions and empower 
radical groups in the region. Either way, Lebanon loses something.

"I don't agree the solution is to grow hashish," said Prime Minister 
Rafik Hariri, whose blunt words have not yet been followed by 
concrete action. "We are going to destroy it, this is for sure. This 
is illegal. This is unethical. And we will not allow it."

Off the valley floor, in the dry rocky hills of the Lebanon 
Mountains, 60-year-old Sobhi Barkashi has resisted the temptation to 
plant cannabis. Instead, he grows tobacco, buying supplies on credit 
and hauling water from distant wells. He has tons of tobacco dried, 
bundled and ready to sell.

"Nobody is buying it," he said despairingly. "I will have to throw it 
all out. I am hoping someone helps."

After a decade of promises from the government and the West, his 
neighbors have given up waiting.

"My family has been 10 years without anything--we had to grow 
hashish," said Monsiour, 25. "People are going hungry. If they try to 
stop us, we have our weapons. We will have war. There will be 
victims."

Cannabis has been grown in the Bekaa for centuries, dating back to 
the days of the Ottoman Empire. The crop became an integral part of 
the economy and the culture, occasionally used as a currency for 
barter and, according to local lore, even included in dowries.

When Lebanon's 15-year civil war began in 1975, the area experienced 
a boomlet, with cannabis as the economic engine. The drug 
revenue--tens of millions of dollars annually--was the cornerstone of 
the local economy. Shopkeepers sold more goods. Factories were built. 
Stone villas shot up in the countryside. Drug profits from sales to 
smugglers from the United States, Europe, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and 
Israel even helped pay for schools and textbooks.

But the profitable harvest also put Lebanon on America's list of 
drug-producing countries. When the civil war finally ended, the 
government was faced with several obstacles to achieving 
international legitimacy. One was the militant group Hezbollah. 
Although it was viewed here as a liberation militia dedicated to 
driving Israel out of southern Lebanon, the West labeled it a 
terrorist organization.

The second problem was the Bekaa's drug production.

"They felt they could defend the presence of Hezbollah because 'it's 
not terrorism, it's resistance,' " said Nasser Ferjani, head of the 
U.N. Program for Integrated Rural Development in the northern Bekaa. 
"But to avoid being criticized and having sanctions imposed against 
Lebanon, they decided to remove the illicit crops."

In 1991, an estimated 75,000 acres were cultivated with cannabis and, 
to a small extent, opium. That year, army troops moved in with 
bulldozers and chemical sprays. The government gave tours to the 
media and international observers as fields were plowed under. By 
1994, the government declared the Bekaa a drug-free zone and the 
international community hailed its success.

But for the 250,000 people living in the region--and the 23,000 
family farms here--the eradication effort wiped out their main source 
of support. The government and foreign countries promised help. In 
1992, a study led by the U.N. Development Program calculated it would 
take $300 million over five years for comprehensive development. But 
all that the people here received in funding was $4.25 million, none 
of which came from international donors.

In June 1995, the U.N.'s Ferjani said, he took the region's case to a 
donor conference in Paris, where he asked for $53 million. Ferjani 
said that the donor community didn't reject the request--it never 
replied.

"Under these conditions, we noted in all our reports since 1994 that 
the return of illicit crops is imminent," Ferjani said. "We cannot 
oblige the people to continue suffering without any reaction from 
their side."

 From June 1994 through this September, the United Nations and the 
cash-strapped Lebanese government have cobbled together $15 million 
to help farmers. Foreign governments have financed a few small 
programs, including the U.S. sale of dairy cows to Lebanon. The cow 
project, however, proved disappointing, primarily because there was 
very little grass to feed the animals, so milk production was low. A 
U.N. project to grow drought-resistant wheat attracted little 
interest and is about to run out of funds.

"We can blame the donor countries, especially the Arab countries that 
promised to help the Lebanese government," Ferjani said of the 
overall situation. "To date, all we have received are tokens."

Lebanon's biggest obstacle to receiving international financial aid 
is that it's just not poor enough compared with underdeveloped 
countries such as Sudan, U.N. officials said. Lebanon's annual per 
capita income of $4,500 disqualifies it as a country in need. But 
that offers little comfort to residents of the Bekaa, where incomes 
are far lower than in the capital, Beirut.

"They think hunger is only what happens in Africa?" said Ali, the 
farmer ready to defend his cannabis fields.

Farmers here say they made an effort to grow legitimate crops but 
could barely even cover their costs. Ali said it costs $100 to 
produce a ton of cannabis, which he can sell for $2,800 to $3,000. By 
comparison, he said, he spends $500 to grow a ton of onions, which he 
can then sell for $100, if he can find a buyer.

With such a great temptation, cannabis started showing up in the late 
1990s. At first, government troops moved in and eradicated it. But 
last year, the government did nothing, and this year, according to 
the U.N., it appears that cannabis cultivation has reached an 
all-time high since the end of the civil war.

Once sowed in remote mountain hide-outs, cannabis now stretches in 
long green ribbons across the open valley. Although the government 
says the crop represents a small part of all arable land, U.N. 
officials on the ground said it is very widespread. "If they don't 
[grow cannabis]," said Nizan Hamadeh, an agricultural engineer with 
the U.N. program here, "they will starve."

So far, the only government action has been to drop leaflets from 
helicopters warning farmers that they will be imprisoned and fined if 
they grow cannabis. But that has had little effect. In Beirut, 
members of parliament and Hezbollah have warned the government not to 
send in troops, arguing that it's wrong to treat this matter with 
security forces. They are using this issue to air their grievance 
that the government has focused so exclusively on rebuilding war-torn 
Beirut that it has neglected the outer regions.

"We are not condoning what they are doing, but we are trying to push 
the government to find an effective solution," said Hussein Husainy, 
who represents the region in parliament. "I am against dealing with 
the situation as a security measure with the police."

But Hariri, the prime minister, said he sees no alternative but to 
send in troops. He won't talk about the cannabis growers and a 
long-term solution in the same dialogue, because he says he doesn't 
want to appear to be rewarding the drug producers.

And he said the government is willing to confront anyone, including 
Hezbollah, if the eradication effort is blocked.

"If the government said, 'OK, we are going to compensate the farmers 
because of the hashish,' you will see next year 10 times hashish 
grown more than this year," he said. "If we do that, then we are 
saying to the people who did not grow hashish and who believed in the 
law that they have been stupid."
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MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe