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Opium Production Soars in Afghanistan
'Pakistan Times' Wire Service
UNITED NATIONS: Opium
production in Afghanistan is soaring out of control, with the southern
Helmand province about to become the world’s largest drug supplier, the
annual UN report on illegal drugs says.
Helmand, which is heartland of Taliban militants fighting NATO forces,
cultivated more drugs than entire countries such as Myanmar, Morocco or even
Colombia, the Vienna-based U.N. Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC) said in
its 2007 World Drug Report.
“Helmand province, severely threatened by insurgency, is becoming the
world’s biggest drug supplier. In Afghanistan, opium is a security issue
more than a drug issue,” UNODC Director Antonio Marias Costa said in the
report’s preface.
“Curing Helmand of its drug and insurgency cancer will rid the world of the
most dangerous source of its most dangerous narcotic, and go a long way to
bringing security to the region.”
While the amount of land under illicit poppy cultivation fell by 10 percent
globally between 2000 and 2006, global opium production soared by 43 percent
to a record high of 6,610 tonnes in 2006 from a year earlier.
This was due to a shift in output from inferior Southeast Asian fields to
more productive ones in
Afghanistan—which in 2006 produced 92 percent of all opium in the world.
Other worrying signs came from Africa, suggesting the impoverished continent
could find itself at the crossroads of international drug crime.
“There are warning signs that Africa is also under attack, targeted by
cocaine traffickers from the west -- Colombia—and heroin smugglers in the
east— Afghanistan,” the report said.
“This threat needs to be addressed quickly to stamp out drug-related crime,
money-laundering and corruption, and to prevent the spread of drug use that
could cause havoc across a continent already plagued by other tragedies.”
The cultivation, production and abuse of almost every kind of drug around
the world—cocaine, heroin, cannabis and amphetamine-type stimulants—had
stabilised overall.
“Progress made in some areas is often offset by negative trends elsewhere,”
wrote Costa. “But overall, we seem to have reached a point where the world
drug situation has stabilized and been brought under control.”
With some 160 million annual customers, cannabis provides the largest
illicit drug market by far.
According to U.N. estimates, global cannabis herb production eased by some 6
percent to 42,000 tonnes in 2005 from a year earlier.
“For the first time in years, we do not see an upward trend in the global
production and consumption of cannabis,” Costa said.
Cocaine production has remained largely stable over the past few years. It
was estimated at 984 tonnes in 2006 amid signs of a drop in cultivation in
Andean countries, especially Colombia.
Global output of amphetamine-style stimulants was estimated to have nudged
down by 2 percent to 478 tonnes in 2005.●
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