Pubdate: Wed, 06 Feb 2008
Source: Herald, The (UK)
Copyright: 2008 The Herald
Contact:  http://www.theherald.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/189
Author: Ian Bruce, Defence Correspondent
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Afghanistan

TALIBAN WINDFALL AS OPIUM CROP IS SET FOR ANOTHER BUMPER YEAR

Afghanistan, the world's biggest opium producer, is set for another
bumper crop this year, providing a windfall for the Taliban who tax
farmers to finance their fight against government and foreign forces.

More than six years after US-led and Afghan forces toppled the
Taliban, the failure to bring opium production under control means
Afghanistan is now locked in a vicious circle. Drug money fuels the
Taliban insurgency and corruption, weakening government control over
large parts of the country, which in turn allows more opium to be produced.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) predicted the
2008 opium crop would be similar to, or slightly lower than, last
year's record harvest. In 2007, Afghanistan had more land growing
drugs than Colombia, Bolivia and Peru combined.

"While it is encouraging that the dramatic increases of the past few
years seem to be levelling off, the total amount of opium being
harvested remains shockingly high," said UNODC chief Antonio Maria Costa.

Opium is processed into heroin and smuggled mainly to Europe, where
users often turn to crime to pay for the drug. "Europe and other
major heroin markets should brace themselves for the health and
security consequences," he said.

Opium poppy cultivation is concentrated in the south where the
Taliban are strongest, and where British troops are based. Opium
production is growing "at an alarming rate" in the south and west, the UN said.

All poppy farmers surveyed in southern Afghanistan said they paid 10%
of their opium income to the Taliban or corrupt government officials.

"This is a windfall for anti-government forces," Costa said. "Further
evidence of the dangerous link between opium and insurgency."

The report comes as Afghan ministers and international donors meet in
Japan to discuss developments in Afghanistan. Britain is pushing for
long-term investment in infrastructure and assistance for Afghan farmers.

Afghanistan is calling for more aid to stamp out opium production,
but diplomats and analysts say President Hamid Karzai has failed to
deal with corruption among government officials.

"We can only fight drugs in Afghanistan by the support of the
international community," said General Khodaidad, acting Minister of
Counter Narcotics, who uses one name.

Japan, host of the two-day meeting, responded by announcing new
assistance of UKP55m, including UKP5m for police reform and UKP4.5m
for border management.

However, Afghanistan's plea for more assistance comes as the United
States and its allies struggle to co-ordinate policy in the face of
rising Taliban attacks. Canada has threatened to pull out unless
other Nato countries contribute more.

Violence in Afghanistan worsened last year and at least 10,000
people, including about 300 foreign troops, have been killed in
Afghanistan in the past two years, aid groups say.

Meanwhile, the number of Afghan civilians killed by accident by US or
Nato forces in air strikes and ground battles doubled between 2006
and 2007, the aid agencies claimed.

Human Rights Watch and the Project for Defence Alternatives (PDA)
said that 272 men, women and children died in bombing raids, 62 were
killed by ground fire and 16 were lost to a combination of the two last year.

This contrasted with 116 known deaths from coalition bombs and 114
from small arms and artillery fire in 2006. The coalition's
increasing reliance on air power to compensate for the lack of troop
numbers on the ground was the major cause of the increase in
"collateral damage", said a PDA spokesman.

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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart