TOKYO — Opium cultivation in rebel-controlled areas in southern and southwestern Afghanistan is expected to grow this year, fueling the Taliban insurgency with more drug money, a U.N. report said Wednesday.
The report, by the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, said that
“Indeed, it is the insurgents, the Taliban, that are deriving an enormous funding for their war by imposing … a 10 percent tax on production,” said Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the U.N. agency.
The one bright spot in the report, which was released on the sidelines of an international meeting on
That meant overall cultivation area would stay even or fall slightly in 2008, the report said, though wet weather could boost the productivity of each poppy plant.
Costa and Gen. Khodaidad,
“The pre-planting campaign is the best way to fight drugs in
The report showed mixed results in the battle against opium in 2007. Poppy cultivation increased in eight provinces and decreased in 26, including 13 that became poppy-free.
For the coming year, 12 of
Nearly a third of villages said they had received cash advances from drug traffickers to grow poppy. All respondents in the southern region and 72 percent in the west said they paid taxes to anti-government entities, including mullahs, local commanders and the Taliban, the report said.
The U.N. report suggested “effective prevention campaigns and eradication efforts” could help control spring cultivation and rid more regions of the crop.
The Senlis Council international policy think tank said, however, that the report showed current approaches were ineffective and counterproductive.
“You need short-term economic incentives and solutions, such as trying to make use of the poppy crop for medicinal use, and producing crops with a high market value, such as saffron,” said Jorrit Kamminga, Senlis’ director of policy research.
However, none of
In addition to opium, the survey found an increase in cannabis cultivation, with 18 percent of villages planning to grow it in 2008, compared with 13 percent last year, when some 172,970 acres of cannabis crops were cultivated.
Christina Gynna Oguz, a U.N. representative in
But in the south, officials have to face an alliance between drug traffickers, corrupt officials, and insurgents.
“So there you will have to fight all these three elements, meaning that you must have much more emphasis on interdiction and fighting corruption,” she said.
Despite the failure to curb poppy production, Zalmai Afzali, the spokesman for the Ministry of Counter Narcotics, said there would be no major change in the strategy to combat the problem, which he blamed on the lack of security.
The report was issued as
The 24-member Joint Coordinating and Monitoring Board monitors the Afghanistan Compact, a five-year blueprint to promote security, the rule of law, human rights and development.
Afghan Foreign Minister Dadfar Spanta said
“We need technical and financial support from the international community to create a new perspective for Afghan farmers,” he told reporters after the Compact talks ended.
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On the Net:
U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, http://www.unodc.org