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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, January 24, 2001 |
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Afghanistan - a challenge in drug control
By B. Muralidhar Reddy
ISLAMABAD, JAN. 23 Afghanistan, which accounts for 95 per cent of
the opium production in the world along with Myanmar, continues
to be the biggest challenge in drug control for the world
community.
The `world drug report 2000,' released by the United Nations
Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention (UNDCP) here,
acknowledges that curtailing opium production and availability of
heroin would not be an easy task given the character of the
Taliban that has control over 95 per cent of the territory in
Afghanistan.
Releasing the report, the representative of the UNDCP in
Pakistan, Mr. Bernard Frahi, told a news conference here on
Monday that his organisation was engaged in negotiations with the
Taliban regime as well as the Northern Alliance on measures to be
taken to curtail opium production.
Asked about the decree issued by the Taliban supreme leader,
Mullah Omar, a few months ago banning poppy cultivation, Mr.
Frahi admitted that given the intensity of conflict in
Afghanistan, it was difficult to ascertain the impact of the
decree.
He said Pakistan was a great success story in South Asia in
curtailing poppy production. According to figures, poppy
cultivation in the country has come down to five tonnes from 800
tonnes. ``It is negligible in international terms'', he added.
On Afghanistan, the report, quoting a survey, said that opium
poppy was cultivated in approximately 91,000 hectares in 1999, an
increase of more than 40 per cent over the previous year. In
2000, cultivation declined by some ten per cent.
It said the total value of Afghan opium crop was around $200
million a year and slightly less than $100 million at harvest
time in 2000 essentially due to fall in prices in the
international market. ``Moreover, results for 2000 - though far
from satisfactory - show that even in Afghanistan opium
production can go down.''
Mr. Frahi said his organisation had been working on an action
plan in Afghanistan. It was designed to build a coalition of
countries bordering Afghanistan with the aim of forming an
integrated strategy to bring down opium production and
trafficking while ensuring that these activities were not simply
displaced to adjacent areas.
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