Thursday, September 30, 2010

Afghanistan's opium farmers earn £63m-a-year to fund Taliban war: Infestation destroys half

Killing fields: Some £63 million is earned by insurgents per year through the opium trade - it helps fund the Taliban's war efforts

New York, 30 Sept. (AKI) - Afghanistan's opium harvest was almost halved as a widespread plant infestation took its toll on the war-torn country's largest source of revenue, according to a United Nations report.

The total 2010 production yield was estimated at 3,600 metric tonnes, down 48 percent from 6,900 mt in 2009, according to report released on Thursday.

"This is good news but there is no room for false optimism; the market may again become lucrative for poppy-crop growers so we have to monitor the situation closely," said Yury Fedotov, executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.

The drop in production was primarily due to a plant infestation in the southern Helmand and Kandahar provinces, according to the UN.

Afghanistan produces 92 of the world's opium.

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Afghanistan's opium farmers earn £63m-a-year to fund Taliban war despite crackdown

Big score: Afghanistan produces 90 per cent of the world's opium, which, in turn, produces heroin

Disease cut the amount of opium produced in Afghanistan in 2010 by almost half from a year earlier, but there was no fall in the number of poppy fields under cultivation, the United Nations said today.

A huge leap in opium prices also meant farmers earned far more for their crops, despite the smaller harvest, than they had in 2009, according to an annual report on drug production.

The survey findings suggested little reduction in incentives to grow poppy - a blow to officials trying to curb Afghan drug production, which they say helps fuel a raging insurgency by funding fighters and encouraging rampant corruption.

Stash: Though some opium is seized, these latest figures offer are not expected to deter other farmers from cultivating

'The sharp decline (in production) was due to the spread of a disease that affected opium fields in the major growing provinces.' the Afghanistan Opium Survey 2010 said.

'It is worrying that the current high sale price of opium in combination with a lower wheat price may encourage farmers to go back to opium cultivation,' the report added.

Afghanistan has long been the producer of about 90 per cent of the world's opium, a thick paste harvested from poppies that is processed to make heroin.

Last year wheat prices rose and poppy prices fell, giving farmers reason to reconsider their planting plans for fields harvested in 2009. This year the reverse was true, with farm-gate opium prices more than doubling from $64 (£40) per kilogramme of dry opium at harvest time in 2009 to $169 (£107) in 2010.

Come down: While opium production has decreased, the price has increased so much that farmers are earning more now than they were last year with less stock
The number of households involved in farming poppy also rose slightly, while fields hit by eradication efforts fell by half.

Higher production was warded off largely by the unidentified disease that decimated crops in areas that grows most opium.

Plants in the west and south also produced smaller, and fewer opium capsules. So potential output was estimated at around 3,900 tonnes, compared with 6,900 tonnes last year, despite a steady 123,000 hectares under cultivation.

This was the lowest output since 2003, the report said.

Even so, opium production provided five per cent of gross domestic product in 2010, up from 4 percent in 2009.

Foreign enforcement agencies estimate insurgents earn as much as $100 million (£63 million) from the opium trade annually, which is funnelled into fighting the nearly 150,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan.

This has been the bloodiest year since the Taliban were ousted in 2001, and rising violence is a deep concern in Washington, where President Barack Obama is due to conduct a strategy review of the increasingly unpopular war in December.

There were some bright spots. The 20 provinces that were poppy-free in 2009, largely spread across the centre, north and east, remained poppy-free this year.

Most poppy cultivation is concentrated in southern and western Afghanistan, where the insurgency is at its strongest, making it hard to enforce anti-narcotics laws or even support farmers who are willing to grow other crops.

'Ninety eight per cent of the total cultivation took place in nine provinces in the Southern and Western regions, including the most insecure provinces in the country,' the report said.

But Helmand province, which grows more than half of Afghanistan's opium, recorded a slight reduction in the acreage devoted to growing poppy despite the strength of the insurgency.

Governor Gulab Mangal's Food Zone programme, which provides farmers with aid to grow other crops while stepping up enforcement efforts, was given much of the credit.

'We congratulate the Governor of Helmand on this result which we believe reflects his progressive and comprehensive approach to countering narcotics,' said Lindy Cameron, head of the UK-led Provincial Reconstruction Team in Helmand.

'Reducing poppy cultivation denies the insurgency an important source of funding.'

Daily Mail

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