Pubdate: Tue, 10 Feb 2004
Source: BBC News (UK Web)
Copyright: 2004 BBC
Contact:  http://news.bbc.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/558
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/afghanistan
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/opium

UN CALLS FOR WAR ON AFGHAN DRUGS

Foreign troops must target traffickers if Afghanistan is to win its
war on drugs, a senior UN official says.

Antonio Mario Costa, head of the UN office on drugs and crime, said a
rare US raid on an Afghan opium-processing lab last month should be
repeated.

US and Nato-led forces have so far resisted calls to tackle drugs
traffickers, saying their first responsibility is to maintain security.

Three-quarters of the world's opium was produced in Afghanistan last
year.

The UN and other agencies have warned the country risks becoming
economically dependent on the drug trade.

Mr Costa told a major conference in the capital, Kabul, on Tuesday
that a bombing raid by American warplanes against a northern opium
processing plant last month had sent ripples through the Afghan drugs
world.

He said it was crucial that similar military action took place if the
country was to win its war against drugs.

He warned that Afghanistan was at risk of becoming a narco state
because corruption was aggravating the drugs problem.

"The more we tolerate that [corruption], the more dangerous the
situation becomes," Mr Costa said.

Military action

The UN drugs chief pointed out that a number of authoritative people -
in Kabul and the provinces - allowed drug trafficking and
cultivation.

He said the government needed to make a "delicate decision" about how
to counteract corrupt officials.

Mr Costa says there is mounting evidence that drug money is being used
to finance criminal activities.

"Fighting drug trafficking equals fighting terrorism," he
said.

Mr Costa's comments came as Nato Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer - also on a visit to Kabul - warned that security remains
fragile all over Afghanistan.

But he stressed on Monday that counter-narcotics operations were not
the prime responsibility of international peacekeepers.

'Alternative livelihoods'

Afghan President Hamid Karzai used the conference to call for greater
international support in tackling the country's growing drugs problem.

He has banned opium poppy cultivation and trafficking but the drug
industry has blossomed since the overthrow of the country's hardline
former rulers, the Taleban.

Mr Karzai stressed the need for greater efforts to develop
"alternative livelihoods" for poppy farmers.

Nearly 7% of the Afghan population is said to now work in the opium
trade, earning as much as Afghanistan receives in foreign aid.

Mr Karzai said poverty forced many farmers to keep growing poppies - a
claim some drugs control experts dispute.

Earlier delegates conceded that it would be difficult to find any crop
to compete with the profits from opium, which is why many put greater
emphasis on law enforcement measures such as the forced eradication of
poppy fields.

The Afghan Government is seeking $300m in donations to fund a campaign
aimed at reducing opium production by 70% within four years and
cracking down on money laundering.

Britain, which helped to organise the drug summit, has contributed
about $128m over three years to the campaign.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin