UN says Afghan opium production hits record high

UN says Afghan opium production hits record high

BureauUpdated: Saturday, June 01, 2019, 06:05 PM IST
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Jalalabad (Afghanistan): Afghanistan’s opium production surged this year to record levels, despite international efforts over the past decade to wean the country off the narcotics trade, according to a report released today by the UN’s drug control agency.

The harvest this past May resulted in a staggering 6,060 tonnes of opium, 49 per cent higher than last year and more than the combined output of the rest of the world. Even Afghan provinces with some past successes in combating poppy cultivation saw those trends reversed, according to this year’s annual UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report.

The withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan next year is likely to make matters even worse, said Jean-Luc Lemahieu, the UNODC regional representative in Kabul. He warned that as international assistance falls off, the Afghan government will become increasingly reliant on illicit sources of income. Uncertainty is also driving up poppy production, as farmers worried about the country’s future turn to the tried and true.

The big increase in production began in 2010 when farmers rushed to plant to take advantage of soaring prices, a result of a crop disease the previous year, the US military surge in the south and the announcement of the US and NATO’s transition out of Afghanistan, Lemahieu told The Associated Press.

Lemahieu said those who benefit from the drug trade include farmers, insurgents and many within the government.

Often, he said, they work together.

Khan Bacha, who cultivates a small plot of land in eastern Nangarhar province, a Taliban stronghold, told the AP this week that the insurgents charge farmers a “religious tax” of one kg of opium for every 10 kg produced though the price is “negotiable.”

“They say we are going for jihad,” Bacha said. “It is the God money we give.”

Past attempts by the international community to combat opium cultivation have included introducing alternative crops and paying farmers in some areas not to plant poppies. That backfired when farmers elsewhere started growing poppies in the hopes of getting money if they stopped.

Cultivation also appears to be spreading to new parts of the country, with Afghans planting poppies in some 516,450 acres across 17 provinces this year, compared with 380,540 acres in 15 provinces in 2012, according to the report.

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