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    UN TO FORCE POPPY FARMERS TO STOP BY DESTROYING OPIUM VALUE PDF Print E-mail
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    Written by Webster, Peter   
    Wednesday, 27 May 2009 00:00

    Pubdate: Wed, 27 May 2009
    Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
    Copyright: 2009 The Sydney Morning Herald
    Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
    Website: http://www.smh.com.au/
    Author: Jon Boone

    UN TO FORCE POPPY FARMERS TO STOP BY DESTROYING OPIUM VALUE

    UNITED NATIONS officials in Afghanistan are trying to create a "flood
    of drugs", which will destroy the value of opium and force poppy
    farmers to switch to legal crops such as wheat.

    After the failure to destroy fields of the scarlet flowers in the
    volatile south, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime says the answer is
    to stop the drugs from leaving the country.

    "Manual eradication is incompetent and inefficient," the UNODC's
    chief, Antonio Maria Costa, said during a visit to the western Afghan
    province of Herat. "So we want to see more efforts to stop the flow
    of drugs across Afghanistan's borders and the hitting of high-value
    targets to create a market disruption.

    "We want to create a flood of drugs within Afghanistan. There will be
    so much opium inside Afghanistan unable to go out that the price will go down."

    Officials admit the plan is a second-best solution to intensive
    eradication campaigns. Last year the Afghan Government succeeded in
    destroying only 3.5 per cent of the country's 157,000 hectares of
    poppy because eradication teams were either attacked or bought off by
    drug lords. But the attempt to use economics to tackle the $4 billion
    narcotics industry is fraught with problems - not least the country's
    thousands of kilometres of porous borders.

    Even without attempts to disrupt the flow of drugs out of the
    country, Afghanistan is destroying the value of its main export.
    Overproduction, which by some estimates twice outstrips world demand,
    has led to a steady fall in the value of opium.

    The UNODC country chief, Jean-Luc Lemahieu, said the strategy of
    capitalising on falling opium prices could be torpedoed by Chinese
    drug dealers looking to supply China's heroin addicts.

    "I think we have a two-year window before the Chinese pick up on the
    Afghan market. Currently the Chinese dealers source their heroin from
    the Golden Triangle. The networks have not yet been established."
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