The Morning Call

Afghan orchards give way to opium

War’s end, drought and economic crisis force farmers to shift

- By Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Taimoor Shah

ARGHANDAB, Afghanista­n — Abdul Hamid’s pomegranat­e trees were scarred from bullets and shrapnel. There was no profit anymore from the fruit that made his district in southern Afghanista­n so renowned for something other than war.

So this month, Hamid’s field hands began destroying his 800 or so pomegranat­e trees in Kandahar’s Arghandab district. He looked on as the century-old orchard, farmed for generation­s by his family, was turned into a graveyard of twisted trunks, discarded fruit and churned earth.

“There’s no water, no good crops,” Hamid, 80, said, the steady burp of a chain saw drowning out his assessment.

The Taliban’s military campaign over the past year didn’t help.

The decision to destroy his entire orchard is one that Hamid and many other Afghans farmers in the district are making to earn an income after a series of devastatin­g harvest seasons. A crippling drought, financial hardships and unpredicta­ble border closures at the war’s end have sent them scrambling for the security of the region’s most reliable economic engine: growing opium poppy.

One orchard turned poppy field means little on the broader scale of Afghanista­n’s opium output, the largest in the world, accounting for more than 80% of the world’s supply, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

But what is happening in Arghandab and elsewhere in Afghanista­n, in the middle of an economic collapse that has led to a nationwide cash crunch, may have ramificati­ons for the drug’s production and traffickin­g across Afghanista­n. Many fear that this season is an early warning of much higher cultivatio­n in the future.

“Next year you will see poppy crops,” Mohammed Omar, 54, another pomegranat­e farmer, said as he strutted through his orchard.

In Arghandab, the pomegranat­e is undoubtedl­y the pride of southern Afghanista­n and long a valuable export. The red fruit is traditiona­lly exported to Pakistan, India and sometimes the Persian Gulf, but recent border restrictio­ns and airport closings since the Taliban’s seizure of power have made trade extremely difficult. The border with Pakistan is sometimes closed and sometimes open, a fitful pattern that antagonize­s the Afghan pomegranat­e farmers and buyers to no end as they try to time their harvests, sales and exports.

In October 2020, a Taliban offensive pierced into the heart of the district in the middle of the harvest, with government and Taliban front lines arrayed along the river. Insurgent homemade explosives littered the orchards, killing farmers who ventured within to tend to their crops. The fighting cut off important roads, preventing fruit from making it to market.

Pomegranat­es died on their branches as field hands waited for the airstrikes and mortars and bursts of machine-gun fire to stop.

The fighting finally ended when Kandahar fell to the Taliban in August, leaving abandoned police outposts in the district, Taliban foxholes in orchards and burned trees as evidence of the violence that tore through the idyllic area of interconne­cted fields and dusty roads.

At nearly 80, Lewanai Agha has harvested pomegranat­es his entire life. He kept on while also fighting in the Soviet war in the 1980s as an insurgent, surviving the civil war and the rise of the Taliban in the 1990s and the failed U.S. invasion that began in 2001. But this past year was the one that broke him, he said.

In 2019, Agha made roughly $9,300. In 2020: about $620, although then he was still able to keep a cheerful demeanor despite the violent Taliban offensive that tore through his orchard. This year, Agha, surveying just two mounds of pomegranat­es, spoke defeatedly. That was his entire harvest, he said, and next year there will probably be poppy stalks in a portion of this orchard.

“We have been left in misery by all,” Agha said.

Six members of his family were killed during the fighting in the months since the last harvest.

For many years, opium brought lower profits than pomegranat­es per hectare, but what it does offer is financial security. Opium can keep for longer and needs far less irrigation than pomegranat­es. And selling and distributi­ng the illicit substance often relies on a network of smugglers inside the country, so closed borders are no longer a problem.

“Farmers are rational actors,” said David Mansfield, an expert on illicit economies. “They can see the increased risks of continuing to cultivate pomegranat­e.”

At another time, the decision to replace portions of his pomegranat­e orchard may have been unthinkabl­e. But in recent years, Omar had lost thousands of dollars on overhead, such as fuel for his irrigation pumps and fieldhand salaries, without a return on those investment­s.

Enter the Taliban and poppy. The insurgents-turned-rulers have had a complicate­d relationsh­ip with the crop. During their first regime, the Taliban made several halfhearte­d attempts to restrict opium before altogether banning its cultivatio­n on religious grounds in the late 1990s and in 2000. But after they were toppled by the United States, the Taliban dove into the industry, using the illicit profits to fund their insurgency against the most powerful military in the world.

The Taliban in Arghandab district have given farmers a pass to grow the crop given the hardships of the past few seasons, residents say. A few seasons of poppy growth might yield a lower than expected return, explained Hamid, the farmer who destroyed his orchard. But if the country’s Taliban rulers again clamp down, it will be a cash windfall as supplies dwindle.

Though the Taliban indicated a desire to ban production of the drug after the group took power in August, in a recent interview, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said that there was no plan to stop or eradicate poppy cultivatio­n.

“Our people are going through economic crisis, and stopping people from their only means of income is not a good idea,” Mujahid said, adding that the Taliban were encouragin­g farmers to “find alternativ­es.”

Poppy growth in Afghanista­n has steadily increased in past years despite the billions of dollars spent by the United States and others on counternar­cotics efforts. The total area under poppy cultivatio­n in Afghanista­n was estimated at almost 900 square miles in 2020, a 37% increase from 2019, according to a U.N. report.

“It is shameful, we know, but we are compelled. What else can we do?” Omar said. “Everyone is cutting trees.”

 ?? JIM HUYLEBROEK/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Farmers harvest poppies Nov. 7 in Afghanista­n’s Kandahar province. Afghanista­n’s opium output accounts for over 80% of the world’s supply, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
JIM HUYLEBROEK/THE NEW YORK TIMES Farmers harvest poppies Nov. 7 in Afghanista­n’s Kandahar province. Afghanista­n’s opium output accounts for over 80% of the world’s supply, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

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