| KABUL, Afghanistan, November
16, 2004 (ENS): Despite renewed pledges by the government
to eradicate the drug trade, those who produce the raw material
for heroin insist they have no alternative. In a televised press
conference following his recent electoral victory, President Hamed
Karzai vowed to redouble efforts to halt drug trafficking.
"There will definitely, definitely not be any drug thing in
Afghanistan, we are going to be dedicated, strong in working against
that," he said.
Yet, even as he was speaking, the autumn harvest was under way.
In southwestern, eastern and northeastern parts of the country,
farmers are expecting a bumper crop - and the biggest yields will
be from opium poppies.
Farmers across the country insist that they will continue to plant
and harvest poppies until the government provides them with alternative
crops and financial support.
"We are not able to support our families unless we grow opium,"
said Tela Mohammad, from Mer Mandab district, Helmand province.
"The government wants to prevent its cultivation, but doesn't
help [farmers]."
He said he would keep growing opium, "even if it costs me
my head."
Farmers throughout Afghanistan said that the main reasons they
depend on opium crops are long-running drought and widespread poverty.
They complain the government hasn't been able to find a better solution.
Ashiqullah, from the village of Jazib in Helmand province, said,
"We have an irrigation problem in our area. There isn't enough
water in the rivers to irrigate the fields properly, and we don't
get a better harvest. So we have to grow opium, because there is
not enough water for wheat and corn."
But government officials focus on public awareness campaigns, rather
than taking any concrete step to prevent rising production.
"We inform people in the villages that we will destroy their
fields if they cultivate opium," said Dad Mohammad, head of
police of Helmand. "We won't let anyone grow it."
Ahmadullah Alizai, head of the counter-narcotics department for
southwestern Afghanistan, said, "According to decree no. 53
of President Karzai, no one has the right to grow opium, and we
have informed all farmers."
Despite such pledges, opium cultivation continues. And farmers
warn that if the government cracks down, they will fight back.
Sher Agha, from the village of Shah Karez in Kandahar province,
said, "If the government uses power, people will resist."
Mer Dad of Shenwar district in Nangarhar province, said he would
take extreme measures to protect his opium crop.
"I must support 17 family members – I can't let them
to die from hunger," he said. "I will even plant mines
to preserve my fields."
Government officials have promised seed, equipment and medicines
for farmers as an incentive to stop growing opium. But in eastern
provinces of Afghanistan such as Nangarhar, Laghman, Kunar and Nuristan,
farmers have continued growing opium despite such promises.
Farhad, from Rodaat district in Nangarhar province, said he owed
a lot of money to various people and was relying on opium to get
him out of debt. "God willing, if I can harvest 35 kilos of
opium, then all my problems will be solved," he said.
In Nangarhar, a key growing region, the government has even attempted
aerial spraying to eradicate the poppy crop. Thus far, such attempts
have not been very effective.
In the north, farmers are also sceptical of the government's ability
to curtail opium production.
"Growing anything else isn't that profitable," said Sufi
Payenda of the village of Yangi Hariq, in Balkh province. "We
can't sustain our lives by growing other plants, so we won't stop
growing opium."
Sayed Mohammed was irrigating his fields in near the village of
Arzankar village in the Chahar Bulak district of Balkh province.
"I grow opium on two jerib [4,000 square metres] of land near
the stream. And when this land is ready, I will grow it here as
well," he said.
Farmers in the north said they would continue to grow opium even
if it puts their lives at risk.
"We will die from hunger if we don't grow opium," said
Malim Mohammad Zaher, from village of Kutaki in Balkh province.
"Even if the government tries to kill us, we won't stop."
Just as in other regions, efforts by officials in the north to
stop opium production have failed.
Mohammed Tayeb, head of education department at the agricultural
institute in Balkh, said there are 439 villages in the province
which each grow opium on an area of at least 54 jerib [108,000 square
meters] of land. According to him, the majority of farmers in the
region are growing some opium.
One reason the government has been so ineffective in combating the
narcotics trade is because of the widespread participation of militia
groups and local officials.
Mohammed Zahir Haqbar, head of the counter-narcotics department
in the interior ministry, accused some officials of being involved
in trafficking drugs abroad.
"No one would dare [participate in trafficking] unless some
governmental officials were involved in this business," he
said.
However, there is hope that with international assistance, the
government can make a dent in opium production.
General Mohammed Daud, deputy interior minister for counter-narcotics,
said that over the next three years, the United States and Great
Britain will help Afghan farmers through dam construction and the
provision of seed and fertilizer. And he promised more robust enforcement
of narcotics laws.
"The government is more capable than in previous years, and
we have strong support from the international community," he
said. "We should decrease production of narcotics by 50 percent
every year."
Daud said it is time for the government to declare holy war –
jihad - on narcotics.
"It is jihad, and there is no greater service that can be
rendered to Afghans and the people of the world," he said.
"It is our religious, Islamic duty."
The United Kingdom has pledged $6.83 million to fund a two year
UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) project to help eliminate
opium production in Afghanistan by developing alternative livelihoods
in the country's main poppy producing areas, the Organization announced
today.
The funding is for the first phase of a $25.5 million five year
multidonor program developed by the FAO to support alternative agricultural
livelihoods, targeting more than 1.5 million people in poppy producing
provinces.
{Published in cooperation with the Institute for War and Peace
Reporting (IWPR). Wahidullah Amani is an IWPR staff writer in Kabul.
This report drew on material from the Pajhwok news agency, an IWPR
project.}
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2004. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/nov2004/2004-11-16-02.asp
|