Pubdate: Tue, 17 Apr 2001
Source: Times of Central Asia (Kyrgyzstan)
Copyright: 2001 The Times of Central Asia
Contact:  http://www.times.kg/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1202
Author: Gregory Gleason

TAJIKISTAN MINISTER'S MURDER POINTS TO DRUG-ROUTE CONFLICT

The gang-land style murder of Tajikistan Deputy Interior Minister Khabib
Sanginov in Dushanbe on April 11 is a sign of intensifying competition
among Tajikistan's drug lords. Tajikistan Interior Minister Khumdin
Sharipov described the assassination as a criminal act, noting that
Sanginov had been heading a government crackdown on organized crime.
Sanginov's murder may be a sign that Tajik government anti-trafficking
efforts are having an effect, and are provoking a reaction.

The assassination was reportedly carried out by up to eight gunmen.
Sanginov 's driver and two bodyguards were also killed in the attack. A
statement by the Islamic Renaissance Party said the killings posed a
threat to stability in the country, and urged the government to bring
the culprits to justice. Reflecting the seriousness of the government's
response, President Imomali Rahmonov is personally overseeing the
investigation.

The assassination marks a significant setback in Tajikistan's fight
against drug trafficking. That effort began in April 1999, when the
Tajik government began working with the United Nations Drug Control and
Prevention Program to develop a systematic anti-drug trafficking
strategy. By April 2000, the Tajik Drug Control Agency (TDCA) had been
established. During its first year of operation, the TDCA has recorded
major gains in drug interdiction, winning accolades from international
organizations and major foreign governments. Tajik officials seized
about 267 kilograms (587 lbs.) of drugs in 2000, most of it heroin.
About 600 Tajik citizens were arrested on various drug charges last
year.

Over the past decade, Tajikistan has emerged as a major transit route
for narcotics produced in neighboring Afghanistan. Organized criminal
gangs have taken advantage of the country's mountainous terrain and its
fractured infrastructure, in which the country finds itself effectively
divided into three transportation zones: the Badakhshan region in the
east, the Leninobod Oblast in the north, and the south-central region.

The underdeveloped transportation network in Badakhshan is connected to
the rest of the country by just two roads and no railway. Leninobod
Oblast has relatively good connections to the Ferghana Valley, but its
link to southern Tajikistan, including Dushanbe, consists of a solitary
mountainous road that is often closed during the winter. Meanwhile,
Russia's 201 Motorized Division patrols large portions of Tajikistan's
border with Afghanistan, but is unable to put a complete stop to drug
trafficking.

The geographical factors have helped foster intense competition among
various criminal groups for control of the best trafficking routes. The
greatest struggle centers on the road running northeast from the
capital, Dushanbe, connecting the Garm region with southern Kyrgyzstan.
This road climbs gradually through the Surkhob river valley, eventually
connecting to the Kyzyl Su valley in southern Kyrgyzstan.

Government control over the main trafficking areas has remained tenuous.
During the 1992-97 Tajik civil war, the area was dominated by
anti-government forces. It may have been that Sanginov, a former member
of the opposition and a former member of the National Reconciliation
Commission, was under great pressure, as a representative of the
opposition, to take on the drug lords. The price Sanginov paid
dramatizes the scale of the stakes in this competition.

While poppy cultivation is a centuries-old phenomenon in Tajikistan, the
trans-shipment of narcotics is a new problem. The recent increase in
drug trafficking dates from the explosion of poppy cultivation in
Afghanistan. According to UN estimates, Afghanistan's poppy harvest in
2000 was about 3,000 metric tons, making the country by far the largest
producer of the drug in the world.

Early distribution routes took Afghan-grown drugs eastward through Iran,
and south via Baluchistan to Pakistan and Karachi and beyond. Only in
the past few years has widespread cultivation reached Afghanistan's
northern provinces, prompting increasing reliance on Central Asian
trafficking routes.

Concurrent with anti-trafficking endeavors, Tajik authorities have been
struggling to promote legitimate foreign trade. Geography is a major
obstacle for Tajik trade, as Uzbekistan enjoys de facto control over
virtually all major trading routes. Trade is further hampered by an
underdeveloped transportation infrastructure.

Now, Tajikistan appears to be caught between competing goals. If the
government succeeds at improving the trade environment through improved
transportation routes, simplified customs procedures, and a more
efficient banking system, these same efforts can lead to greater
problems with drug trafficking and smuggling.

(eurasianet.org)
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