Pubdate: Sun, 27 Jun 2004
Source: DAWN (Pakistan)
Copyright: 2004 The DAWN Group of Newspapers
Contact:  http://www.dawn.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/101

IRAN POLICE BLAME US, UK FOR FLOW OF AFGHAN DRUGS

TEHRAN, June 26: Iran's police blamed Britain and the United States for 
bumper poppy crops in Afghanistan that are inflaming social problems in a 
country where more than two million people are drug addicts.

Iranian forces marked the UN International Day Against Drug Abuse and 
Illicit Trafficking in Tehran on Saturday by blowing up a huge mound of 
seized drugs topped with a picture of a bat-like monster with blood-red eyes.

They chanted "Death to America" as the contraband exploded.

"We hold America and Britain responsible for this situation ... Americans 
are in charge of Afghanistan's security and Britons are responsible for 
fighting fight drugs there," said anti-narcotics commander Mehdi Abuee.

Iran is the main route for Afghan drugs heading west.

The police announced they reckoned almost 48,560 hectares of Afghan farms 
were under poppy cultivation, adding this was unprecedented in the 
country's history.

Iran has built chains of walls and forts across its porous eastern borders 
but smugglers have gone back to old ways, taking drugs through mountain 
passes by rucksack and camel.

"Only 10 per cent of poppy farms have been destroyed and of what remains, 
4,100 tons of opium will be produced this season," Abuee added.

Many Afghan farmers felled their citrus groves to turn to the more 
lucrative crop.

Some 3,300 Iranian servicemen have died in battles with traffickers since 
the 1979 revolution.

"This is an on-going, all-out, weary war," Abuee said.

PUBLIC CAMPAIGNS: Iran, where 70 per cent of the population is under 30, is 
open about its drugs problem has shown drug awareness programmes on 
television through the week.

Cartoons for children showed an addict in a park turn into a skeleton then 
flake to dust.

Opium smoking has been the traditional Iranian vice and is ingrained in the 
culture of southern provinces.

But programmes for youngsters focused on the risks of recreational drugs 
such as ecstasy, taken at raves where young people let off steam from the 
strict confines of their society.

Last year Iran said it seized three tons of heroin, 72 tons of hashish and 
111 tons of opium.

But Ali Hashemi, head of the presidential anti-narcotics staff said this 
was only about 10 percent of the opium flooding across the border.

Hashemi said fighting drugs should be an important focus for international 
co-operation.

"Political differences aside, we welcome cooperation with any country to 
defuse this dangerous phenomenon," he said.

He added economic dependence, lack of powerful central government and the 
international drug mafia were to blame for the increase in Afghan poppy 
cultivation.

"Apart from the 4 percent of Iran's population who are addicts, the rest 
ask why the Western powers are not using the new opportunity in Afghanistan 
to put an end to drugs problem in the world," Hashemi said.-Reuters
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