Pubdate: Wed 29 Jun 2005
Source: Scotsman (UK)
Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 2005
Contact:  http://www.scotsman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/406
Author: David Barrett
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/afghanistan

BRITAIN LOSING OPIUM WAR WITH BOOMING AFGHAN POPPY GROWERS: UN

Growth of opium poppies in Afghanistan - which Britain plays the
leading role in combating - has reached unprecedented levels, the UN
said today.

The area under cultivation for the heroin crop leapt from 80,000
hectares in 2003 to 131,000 hectares last year.

Today's UN World Drug Report said global poppy cultivation increased
16% last year, entirely due to the situation in Afghanistan, which was
responsible for 67% of crops worldwide.

Opium cultivation has surged in Afghanistan since the fall of the
Taliban regime, which prohibited farmers from growing the crop.

Home Secretary Charles Clarke has acknowledged that Britain has not
made as much progress as hoped in defeating the Afghan opium growers.

The UN report said: "Of greatest concern is the fact that opium poppy
cultivation has been introduced into previously unaffected areas and
is now found in all 34 provinces of the country."

In contrast, cultivation in Laos fell 43% to 6,600 hectares and in
Burma (Myanmar) 23% to 44,200 hectares.

The report added: "Opium prices in Afghanistan were declining with
increasing supplies."

"The average price for fresh opium at the time of harvest amounted to
92 US dollars per kilo in 2004, a 69% decline compared to the previous
year."

It said global opium production increased 2% to 4,850 metric tons in
the year, due to relatively low crop yields in the year.

This amount could potentially produce 565 metric tonnes of heroin,
said the report.

Opiate seizures worldwide increased by a third to a record high of 110
metric tonnes.

Comparing the production and seizure figures suggested law enforcement
agencies were intercepting nearly a quarter of all opiates produced,
it added.

The UN document said an estimated 200 million people aged 15 to 64, or
5% of the world's population, have used illegal drugs in the last 12
months, 15 million more than last year.

It said the figure remained significantly lower than the number using
legal psychoactive substances such as alcohol and tobacco.

An estimated 16 million used opiates, including 10.6 million heroin
abusers.

Shadow home secretary David Davis said: "Britain was charged with
responsibility for controlling heroin growth in Afghanistan in 2001.

"This report clearly shows that the government continues to fail."

"Heroin exported from Afghanistan makes its way through our porous
borders into our communities.

"This, in turn, fuels the escalating problem of violent and gun
related crime on our streets."

He added: "It is no wonder the number of hard drug users in this
country now tops a million people and is increasing.

Labour have not just failed in the war on drugs, they haven't even
begun to fight it."
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