Pubdate: Wed, 05 Feb 2003 Source: The Daily Star (Lebanon) Contact: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/547 Author: Badih Chayban INTERIOR MINISTER TAKES AIM AT ILLICIT DRUG CROP Proposed Slogan: 'Plant to Eat, Not to Kill' 'Our decision is firm ...We will not allow the harvesting of poisons' For the sake of Lebanon and its children, do not plant drugs, Interior Minister Elias Murr advised farmers a few weeks before what could be the start of a new drug planting season. "We will carry on with our war on drug cultivation, the war between good and evil, and we will not stop nor compromise until what is right wins over what is wrong," Murr said Tuesday, during a workshop held under his patronage at UNESCO on ways to fight drug cultivation. Addressing dozens of municipal officials and mukhtars from the Bekaa area, the main location for cannibas harvesting, Murr said that local authorities had an essential role in orienting farmers and keeping them away from illegal drug harvesting, particularly at the start of the season. "Let the farmers' slogan be: 'plant to eat, not to kill,'" Murr told his audience. He argued that if the local figures did not help in this campaign, farmers would have to pay the price when the Internal Security Forces arrest them and destroy their drug crops. "Cultivating drugs is a crime, and we should all cooperate, utilizing all available means and capabilities, to help those farmers stay away from this plague," he said. Murr cited official figures from last year's campaign against drug harvesting and dealing, stating that more than 2,000 drug dealers were arrested and some 120 million square meters of drug crops destroyed. "Our choice is clear and our decision is firm. We will not allow the harvesting of poisons. We will not permit the country's youth and society to be destroyed, and we will not allow anyone to harm the country's reputation," he said. Murr stressed the shared responsibility of the government, municipal councils, mukhtars, land owners, civil society, and nongovernmental organizations in the fight against drug harvesting. He urged donor countries to fulfill their commitments and support substitute crops in Lebanon as implemented in other drug harvesting nations. The effort to stimulate the cultivation of alternative crops has largely floundered, according to many observers. Murr added that the support of substitute crops was "a lot cheaper" than chasing drug dealers and rehabilitating drug addicts. Mehdi Ali, the regional representative in the Middle East and North Africa for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), hailed the Interior Ministry's efforts in its fight against drugs. Ali said that the ministry succeeded in reducing the drug supply through the destruction of large planted areas, gaining the attention of the UNODC, which he said is trying to learn from the Lebanese experience. He added that Lebanon was the only country that destroyed its drug crops without collecting any foreign aid, which is in fact a sore point for many activists, farmers and politicians. Mehdi also hailed the ministry's media campaign which is aimed at reducing drug demand, saying that Murr had a "comprehensive plan that would lead to the final abolition of this plague." Deir al-Ahmar Mayor Khalil Sukkar, who was present for a workshop following the addresses, said all of the country's farmers were against drugs. "But farmers are out of work and starving, and nobody is offering the substitute," he complained. Sukkar argued that farmers were not drawn to drug cultivation out of the profit motive, but as a rational choice because of the market and the poor infrastructure situation. Farmers are "not getting rich" by planting drugs, said Sukkar, but they are encouraged to do so because it is easy to sell their crop and because drug cultivation requires little in the way of water supplies. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake