Pubdate: Wed, 08 Nov 2006
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2006 New Zealand Herald
Contact:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300

NZ TROOPS DESTROY $18M OF OPIUM IN AFGHANISTAN

New Zealand Troops in Afghanistan Have Destroyed a Haul of Opium With 
a Potential Street Value of US$12 Million ($18m).

The almost one tonne of drugs was confiscated on November 1 by a team 
of Afghan National Police after they caught up with smugglers on a 
deserted road.

The New Zealand Defence Force in Bamyan received a call from the 
province's governor Habibi Serabi asking if they could incinerate the drugs.

Wooden pellets filled with opium were stacked on top of each other 
and doused in petrol before being set alight.

Medical Officer Major Phil Misur, one of those involved in the drugs' 
destruction, said the experience was as satisfying as it was extraordinary.

"Working in the burn pit surrounded by millions of dollars worth of 
foul smelling opium, mixed with plenty of diesel and petrol, is an 
experience I'll never forget," he said.

Police superintendent John Kelly, from Hamilton, said he had never 
seen such a large quantity of drugs in 30 years of police work.

Mr Kelly said: "It's certainly the biggest haul I've seen in my 
career and it's a bit different from the average couple of pounds of 
cannabis you might turn over back home."

Afghanistan is the world's biggest supplier of opium with the 
country's southern Helmand province producing over 70 per cent of the 
world's total production alone, the NZDF said.

The annual profit from opium of US$1.3 billion plays a significant 
part, the NZDF said, in the funding of the ongoing Taleban and Al 
Qaeda insurgency in Afghanistan.
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MAP posted-by: Elaine