Pubdate: Fri, 02 Apr 2004
Source: Mail and Guardian (South Africa)
Copyright: Mail & Guardian, 2004
Contact:  http://www.mg.co.za/mg/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/254
Guardian Unlimited Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

UK ACCUSED OVER AFGHAN OPIUM FAILURE

Britain has bungled its command of an international campaign to rid 
Afghanistan of opium poppy, and its failure has contributed to an 
unprecedented increase in heroin production, a senior US official said on 
Thursday.

In an unusually critical report, the state department's senior narcotics 
official, Robert Charles, told a congressional committee hearing that 
British efforts had been painfully slow at a time when Afghanistan was 
poised for a bumper heroin season.

Charles claimed this would be disastrous for Afghanistan. Without a 
crackdown on opium poppy, the country would rapidly slide into the grip of 
drug lords and become increasingly lawless.

Last year, there was a bumper crop of Afghan drugs, and this year promises 
an even better season. Unseasonably warm temperatures in the southern 
provinces of Helmand and Nangarhar have brought forward the planting season.

The early spring -- and Britain's ineffectual policing -- now threatened to 
expand the area of Afghan farmland under poppy cultivation by as much as 
100% in 2004, Charles said.

Despite the urgency, Britain had barely begun to destroy about 5 000 
hectares of poppy that were slated for eradication this year in Nangarhar 
and Helmand, the committee was told.

The two provinces are at the centre of poppy cultivation, and Britain's 
reluctance to crack down here could encourage farmers throughout 
Afghanistan to plant poppy.

"Unless direct, effective and measurable action is taken immediately, we 
may well be looking at well over 120 000 hectares this year," Charles said.

Such criticism of America's closest ally is rare in Washington -- 
particularly on the issue of Afghanistan, where Charles commended Britain's 
efforts in training local Afghan drug forces.

But, since taking charge of the campaign against the Afghan poppy, Britain 
has presided over a staggering rise in opium production.

According to US intelligence, more hectares of Afghan farmland were devoted 
to poppy production in 2003 than ever before. The United Nations drug 
enforcement agency has charted a similar rise.

The US believes Britain needs to be more robust in its approach to Afghan 
poppy growers rather than trying to find the farmers other means of 
survival. Charles also accused Britain of being overly concerned with 
winning the political support of local Afghan notables.

"We believe that if there is heroin poppy that needs to be eradicated we 
shouldn't be picking and choosing, we shouldn't be delaying, we shouldn't 
be making it conditional on finding an alternative income stream," he said.

"Our priority here should not be a misplaced sympathy for someone who has 
to do a little more work."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom