Bangkok Post

Opium cultivatio­n up 10% this year, UN reports

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KABUL: Afghanista­n saw a 10% jump in opium cultivatio­n this year, a sharp rise owing to bumper yields, collapsing eradicatio­n efforts amid growing insecurity and declining internatio­nal counter-narcotics assistance, the UN said yesterday.

Cultivatio­n dropped last year due to drought conditions but it has been on the rise in the past decade, fuelling the Taliban insurgency and spurring a growing crisis of drug addiction despite costly US-led counter-narcotics programmes.

High levels of cultivatio­n this year meant the estimated opium production soared 43% to 4,800 tonnes, a UN Office on Drugs and Crime report said, highlighti­ng a “worrying reversal” in efforts to combat the scourge of drugs.

“The cultivatio­n has increased by 10% this year compared to the same time in 2015 — from 183,000 hectares to 201,000 hectares,” counter-narcotics minister Salamat Azimi told reporters while releasing the UN report.

“Ninety-three percent of the cultivatio­n has taken place in the southern, eastern and western parts of the country.”

The southern restive province of Helmand remained the country’s top poppy cultivatin­g province, followed by Badghis, Kandahar, Uruzgan, Nangarhar and Farah — all hotbeds of insurgent activity.

Officials cited falling internatio­nal donor support and growing insecurity as the main reasons for the increase in cultivatio­n.

Eradicatio­n efforts also appeared to collapse. A total of 355 hectares of poppy eradicatio­n was carried out this year, a 91% decrease from 2015.

“In 2016, farmers’ resistance against poppy eradicatio­n operations was occasional­ly expressed through direct attacks on eradicatio­n teams,” the UN report said.

“No eradicatio­n took place in the provinces with high levels of opium poppy cultivatio­n due to the extremely poor security situation in those areas and logistical/ financial challenges to organise the eradicatio­n teams on time.”

Afghanista­n saw a drop in opium cultivatio­n last year for the first time since 2009, a UN report said, citing drought conditions as a key reason for the decline. But that was seen as a temporary blip.

Poppy farmers in Afghanista­n, the world’s leading producer of opium, are often taxed by the Taliban, who use the cash to help fund their insurgency.

“Most of the wars in Afghanista­n are financed by income from poppy. Anywhere you see poppy in Afghanista­n you see fighting there,” said Baz Mohammad Ahmadi, deputy minister of interior for counter narcotics.

Internatio­nal donors have splurged billions of dollars on counter-narcotics efforts in Afghanista­n over the past decade, including efforts encouragin­g farmers to switch to other cash crops such as saffron. But those efforts have shown little results.

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