Source: Agence France Presse FAX: AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE LOS ANGELES CA 12133831745 CARLOS SCHIEBECK; HARD TIMES ENCOURAGE ALBANIAN FARMERS TO GROW DRUGS TO FEED FAMILY by Adrian Brown Copyright (c) 1997, Agence France Presse With a modicum of trouble and a little discretion, Albanian farmer Bashkim Ahmeti can double his annual income and contribute to one of his country's few export industries drugs. On a small patch of land measuring no more than ten meters (yards) by three, Ahmeti can grow enough marijuana to net around 1,000 dollars, some 300 dollars more than the average annual Albanian wage. Tucked away behind a screen of reeds on a scrap of land in the middle of carefully tended crops, this year's crop of hemp plants are just beginning to come through. Just ten centimeters tall at this time of year, the 40odd plants Ahmeti planted a fortnight ago will quickly grow to two or three meters high. "They don't need much care," he explains. "When they are about half a meter high I spread chicken droppings over them and then add water when they need it. Some people use cow dung but I find chicken droppings the best, it's much stronger," he says. According to Ahmeti, which is not his real name, there are hundreds like him. "Everyone grows it around here," he confides, adding: "It's to provide for my family over the winter." When ready, Ahmeti dries and cleans the plant, then sells it to the local dealer at 30 dollars a kilogram. "I'll sell it to anyone who wants it. There's no shortage of people around here willing to buy," he said. Demand for marijuana has increased in recent years after the ultrastrict communist regime in power in Albania until the early 90s withered away. In addition, new smuggling routes have opened up through the mountainous Balkan republic as the favoured drug runs through the former Yugloslavia, just to the north, dried up while war raged there. The first year Ahmeti grew hashish, his seven plants yielded 11 kilograms. Last year he got 42 kilograms from 30 plants and this year's crop of 40 plants will produce even more of the drug. Vlore, currently in the hands of a rebel committee after local government was forced out at gun point in March, has long been a popular smugglers haunt. It is one of the few sources of revenue. Returns are good and there is little to worry about from the police. Fast speed boats are used by gangs to transport the crop to Italy, a short hop across the Adriatic to the southern coast of Albania's Mediterranean neighbour. From there the drug continues its journey through Europe. Other destinations include Greece, lying to the south of Albania. Ahmeti, a thin wiry man with a thick shock of grey hair, said it was a Greek who showed him how to grow the drug. "He wrote everything down on a piece of paper," he explained. The problem has been raised by the European Union with the Albanian authorites, and the United States has sent drug enforcement officers to Tirana to help train the police. Currently, with the unrest in Albania, drug enforcement is not at the top of the agenda. But even before, the police were hard pushed to enforce the law which makes it illegal to grow the drug. Police did visit Ahmeti's small plantation once, he recalled, but they left after he told them his family depended on the crop for money. "After a while they left me alone," Ahmeti recalled. The rest of the year, Ahmeti grows aubergines and tomatoes and other vegetables but insists this is not enough to provide for his family of six. "My family is dying for bread. What are they going to think? Sure they are going to agree to my growing this stuff," he says. Albania, Europe's poorest country, has liberalised large parts of its economy but still huge sections of the population remain out of work or underemployed. More recently, general poverty has been exacerbated by the loss of an estimated one billion dollars in bogus investment schemes, which sparked unrest this year. Marijuana, along with chrome and copper, are among the handful of exports Albania produces. awb/ccr AFP