Pubdate: Fri, 18 Oct 2002
Source: Newsday (NY)
Copyright: 2002 Newsday Inc.
Contact:  http://www.newsday.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/308
Author: Todd Pitman, Associated Press

KARZAI: OPIUM GROWERS NEED LIVELIHOOD

KABUL, Afghanistan -- President Hamid Karzai said Thursday that Afghanistan
must offer alternative livelihoods to poppy farmers if the country is to
eradicate soaring opium production, and he called on the international
community to help in the effort.

U.N. officials estimate the country's opium harvest could top 2,500 tons
this year, putting Afghanistan among the world's top producers and exporters
of opium.

The estimated harvest is a massive increase from 2001, when Afghanistan
produced 185 tons of opium under the former Taliban regime, according to the
U.N. International Drug Control Program. In 2000, the year before the
Taliban banned poppy production, output totaled 3,276 tons.

"Victory in this war is not only vital for the people of Afghanistan but
also for the whole international community," Karzai said in a statement read
on his behalf at the start of a narcotics control conference in Kabul.

Karzai asked the international community to help eradicate the opium trade,
which he said threatens the stability of his government.

Many farmers rely heavily on opium sales to feed their families. Karzai said
providing alternatives to poppy cultivation was vital to the eradication
effort.

"They need to see the physical evidence out there in the fields and
farmlands, that we are able to provide other means for them to improve their
lives," Karzai said.

The government banned opium production nationwide in April, offering farmers
$500 per acre of poppy. But the ban has done little to dissuade farmers, who
can earn as much as $6,400 an acre for the crop, according to the United
Nations.

Poppy production increased drastically when Afghan farmers began to plant
the crop again after the Taliban were ousted last year by U.S. and
opposition forces.

"I am told that the poppy offers a return on investment that is 38 times
that of wheat. If farmers are to accept assistance to pursue alternative
livelihoods, they must also be convinced that the assistance will be there,
reliably," said Lakhdar Brahimi, the U.N. special representative to
Afghanistan.

Government officials told U.N. officials, diplomats and international donor
representatives attending Thursday's conference on drugs about efforts to
improve law enforcement, offer alternative livelihoods to farmers and
strengthen the judicial system.

On Wednesday, authorities in Kabul burned 5,500 pounds of hashish and raw
opium in a bonfire -- a public warning intended to show the government was
serious on cracking down on drug trafficking.
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MAP posted-by: Josh