As the pink poppy fields of southern Afghanistan yield their sticky harvest, opium production in the country that supplies the world with heroin is set to fall, farmers and officials say.
That’s good news for the fight against the multi-billion-dollar drugs trade, but it could be bad news for Afghan farmers struggling to feed their families as the war against Taliban insurgents and drugs gangs escalates.
“This year we had less poppy cultivation, which I think was because of our public awareness campaign which we launched before cultivation started,” said Gul Mohammad, head of the counter-narcotics department of Kandahar Province.
PHOTO: AFP
Farmers in the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, the source of around 90 percent of the world’s opium, agreed the harvest will fall this year.
The farmers and other experts cited high rainfall in some areas, drought in others, free seeds for alternatives such as wheat and good prices for food crops, and a mystery disease withering plants in some areas.
While some farmers have reportedly accused the US and Britain of spraying their crops with chemicals, the UN’s Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said disease was the likely culprit.
Tests by the interior ministry were inconclusive and more were being carried out, said the agency’s representative in Kabul, Jean-Luc Lemahieu, adding that “plagues, pests, blight” had hit Afghanistan’s poppy crop in 2002 and 2006.
“Natural phenomenon cannot be excluded, as happens to wheat, corn, apples. It is part of nature,” Lemahieu said.
Bilal, a farmer in Helmand’s Nad Ali district, said disease drastically cut his opium output.
“We are in the very last days of the harvest, maybe in two or three more days we’ll be done. We’ll have less output this year,” he said. “I don’t know what the disease is, but we’ll have little output [as a result].”
UNODC said opium output was down by 10 percent last year to 6,900 tonnes, but yield rose 15 percent because farmers extracted more opium per bulb.
Production far outstripped annual world demand of 5,000 tonnes, it said, with stockpiles of opium estimated at 10,000 tonnes as cartels hoarded in an effort to push up prices that had fallen by 30 percent in a year.
Stockpiles were equal to two years’ supply of heroin for addicts, or three years of morphine for medical use, it said.
Lemahieu said it was too early to say if this year’s output would be lower than last year’s — making it the third consecutive annual fall — but yields were likely to be affected.
Stockpiles had kept opium and heroin prices artificially high, which could encourage Afghan farmers to continue to plant poppies, he said, adding that the price of alternative cash crops, from almonds to wheat, would also be a factor.
The impact of the conflict between insurgents — who often work with drugs gangs to protect crops and distribution routes — and Western-backed government forces would also influence farmers, he said.
Like farmers the world over, Afghans would plant whatever earned most, and the instability of war could see them favor the “one sure way of safe-guarding against an insecure future,” he said.
Marjah, a major poppy-producing region in Helmand, was targeted in a military campaign in February that aimed to push out the Taliban, who were acting as enforcers for the drugs gangs.
Afghanistan’s opium industry is worth up to US$3 billion a year, supplying Russia, where authorities say it kills between 30,000 and 40,000 addicts a year, and Europe.
Lemahieu said about US$150 million funds the insurgency, widely seen as based on ideology, but fast becoming a militia for the cartels with tenuous links to the religious extremists who founded the Taliban.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s government is also associated in the minds of both his Western backers and Afghan people with drugs-related corruption.
His half brother Ahmad Wali Karzai, head of the Kandahar provincial council, is widely believed to be a major drugs trade figure though he denies the accusations.
A recent report by the independent Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit, titled Where Have All the Flowers Gone? said the Taliban were “increasingly seen as synonymous with drug traffickers.”
However, it added: “There is a growing belief in the south that those working for the government are more actively involved in the trade in narcotics than the Taliban.”
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