Pubdate: Mon, 24 Feb 2003
Source: IRNA - Islamic Republic News Agency (Iran Wire)
Copyright: 2003sIslamic Republic News Agency

OFFICIAL: DRUG TRADE POSES THREAT TO WORLD

Tehran, Feb 24, IRNA -- Head of Iran Anti-Narcotics Headquarters Ali Hashemi
said here Monday that drug trade poses a threat to the world.

In a meeting with visiting Azerbaijan's Justice Minister Lieutenant General
Fekran Mohammadov, he referred to the membership of Iran and Azerbaijan in
the UN Secondary Anti-drug Commission, adding, "Contact between the two
nations is an effective way to forge closer bilateral ties."

On the issue of drug cultivation in Afghanistan, he said the western
countries, after they had established their presence in the war-torn country
should have also dealt with the drug menace as they did with terrorism.

"Unfortunately, today we are effectively confronted with over 30 percent
rise in the illicit drug cultivation in Afghanistan," Hashemi said.

He said if the world does not seriously address anti-drug trafficking
measures, 'then, in addition to Iran, regional states and European countries
will also bear the brunt of the damages'.

He called for exchange of information and expansion of cooperation in
anti-drug campaign. He also welcomed the signing of a memorandum
understanding on drug campaign as beneficial for both nations.

The Azeri official also referred to the cultivation of narcotics in Karabakh
region and conveyed his countries interest in expansion of anti-drug
cooperation with Iran.

Iran is collaborating with other regional countries to beef up the campaign
against the drug trade. For example Iran and Pakistan anti-drug organs are
working closely to fight the resurgent menace of drug smuggling from
Afghanistan, said a senior Pakistani official in Islamabad week.

In an interview with IRNA here, the director-general of Pakistan's
Anti-Narcotics Force, Major General Zafar Abbas, said that excellent
cooperation existed between Iranian and Pakistani anti-drug bodies in the
fight against drug smuggling.

He said that Afghanistan, a landlocked country, finds exit routes for its
drugs in Iran, Pakistan and other neighboring countries on their way to
Europe and other countries.

"With Afghanistan again becoming a center of poppy cultivation, Iran,
Pakistan and Afghanistan will have to work hard jointly to face this
horrible challenge," Abbas maintained.

The ANF chief said that Pakistan shared over 2100 kilometers of common
borders with Afghanistan, 900 kilometers with Iran and also has a
1,000-km-long coastal area. Drug pushers have always found it easy to send
drugs to Iran and on wards via Pakistan, the official added.

Pakistan and Iran, Abbas said, are transit routes in the sense that drugs
come out of Afghanistan through these two countries on their way to
lucrative markets elsewhere, but, also causing both countries to have a
sizable number of drug addicts.

He talked about the tremendous cooperation between the ANF in Islamabad and
the Drug Control Head Quarters in Tehran.

Under a UNDCP project the bodies are coordinating their efforts to tackle
the drug issue in a more effective way, he said.
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