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After three-year ban, farmers in eastern Afghanistan resume planting opium poppies
AP | 11/25/01 | CHRIS TOMLINSON

Posted on 11/24/2001 8:12:49 PM PST by kattracks

SORKHUD, Afghanistan, Nov 24, 2001 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- Gul Haidar smiled as he sifted some seeds through his fingers, happy he had planted the one crop that should ensure his family's welfare next year - opium poppies.

In pencil-thin, spiraling furrows dug with a homemade plow pulled by oxen, Haidar has sown the tiny, pale specks that will yield flowers in four months. When the petals fall, buyers will come for the seed pods and its opium resin.

The Pashto-speaking farmer expects to triple what he had made from the winter wheat he had planted the last three seasons.

With the Taliban no longer around to enforce a three-year ban on poppy-growing, hundreds of farmers near the eastern city of Jalalabad - their appetite for profit sharpened by years of drought and hardship - have resumed planting what they call "narcotic."

"We don't have much water, so with narcotic we make more money to offset the problem of the drought," Haidar said. "If you water twice a year, narcotic will do very well, but with wheat, you have to water nine times."

Miles of flat fields surround Jalalabad, with barren desert mountains visible in the distance. Hundreds of miles of irrigation canals funnel runoff from mountain springs and creeks onto the fields, but after three years without rain, water is precious.

The 75-year-old Haidar, who lives in a mud house, has rented his 750 acres from a wealthy Afghan for the past half-century.

Before the Taliban ban, he almost exclusively grew poppies. During the past three years, he switched to wheat rather than risk imprisonment. But Haidar had stashed a bag of poppy seeds - and brought them out when the Taliban fled Jalalabad this month, in time for planting season.

Now he has sown 250 acres (100 hectares) of poppies, which he said will yield 650 pounds (290 kilograms) of opium.

"It will be just enough to live," Haidar said. "I have a family of 10, so I work just to live, eat and for clothes."

Afghanistan was once the world's largest opium producer, enough to supply 75 percent of the world's heroin, according to the U.N. Drug Control Program.

Farmers produced 3,611 tons from the 1999 planting. But after a ruthless Taliban crackdown, the crop in 2000 dropped to 204 tons, the agency said in July.

Most of the opium is exported and is rarely used locally.

Mujahed, a 42-year-old farmer who uses only one name, said buyers give him an advance so that he can buy fertilizer and survive until the crop comes in. They return during the annual harvest to buy his seed pods and take the opium to Pakistan, where, he says, "they make the stuff that is very bad."

"But we don't know about the advantages or disadvantages for other people," Mujahed said. "I don't know what they do with it. ... For me, there are a lot of advantages over wheat."

The U.N. drug program spent years working with the Taliban and aid agencies to discourage poppy growing and encourage wheat production. But farmers outside Jalalabad said they never saw any of the aid money that was funneled through the Taliban.

"The Westerners, when they want to help us, they should put the aid in our hands, not give it to the leaders," Mujahed said, adding that he would stop growing poppies if given an alternative.

But Kasim, a 65-year-old white bearded farmer, was less sympathetic.

"Our life is really very difficult, because we can't grow wheat and still survive," he said. "We need to grow narcotic, even if it is not fair to the rest of the world."

By CHRIS TOMLINSON Associated Press Writer

Copyright 2001 Associated Press, All rights reserved



TOPICS: News/Current Events
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1 posted on 11/24/2001 8:12:49 PM PST by kattracks
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To: kattracks; Black Jade; CommiesOut
bump
2 posted on 11/24/2001 8:18:49 PM PST by Free the USA
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: kattracks
Most of the opium is exported and is rarely used locally.

For what it's worth, very little of this stuff comes to the U.S. Local junkies tend to get their opiates from Central and South America. This harvest is going to Europe.

4 posted on 11/24/2001 8:25:02 PM PST by Drew68
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To: kattracks
Good heavens. A hard-earned living via nefarious crop. A hard-nosed dose of American righteousness oughta set this guy straight.
5 posted on 11/24/2001 8:27:42 PM PST by Fester Chugabrew
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To: Kalashnikov_68
Afghanistan resumes growing poppies, Libertarian Florists dance in the streets.
6 posted on 11/24/2001 8:28:57 PM PST by Hillary's Lovely Legs
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To: kattracks
Calling agent orange. Calling agent orange.
7 posted on 11/24/2001 8:29:26 PM PST by RLK
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: kattracks
How can they keep selling that opium when no one really wants it? --> The CIA silly. hehehe
9 posted on 11/24/2001 8:38:57 PM PST by JmyBryan
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To: kattracks
Since ancient times, opium has been a useful crop. Give this guy a legitimate market this year. (He'll probably get an even better price selling to a source for pharmaceutical painkillers.) Next year, we need to ensure a demand for other crops, whether wheat, sunflowers or whatever. These people are making the most rational choices to the options that they have. What happens in Afghanistan doesn't depend so much on what happens in Bonn on Tuesday as on what happens to these regular shmoes.
10 posted on 11/24/2001 8:41:43 PM PST by El Pato Lukas
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To: kattracks
Where do we get opium for medicines?
11 posted on 11/24/2001 8:42:37 PM PST by oceanperch
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: kattracks
Given the flood of opium that has been flowing out of Afghan the last few months, I doubt that the Taleban had ended production. More likely they just shifted the franchise to their own people.
13 posted on 11/24/2001 9:50:01 PM PST by atafak
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To: Mak90kidoflincolnNE
Re your post#12

GREAT IDEA!

14 posted on 11/25/2001 8:23:55 PM PST by Cindy
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Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: KLT
Time to bust the dope dealers with a few more daisy cutters..heheh
16 posted on 11/26/2001 4:40:23 PM PST by ChaseR
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To: ChaseR
Time to bust the dope dealers with a few more daisy cutters..heheh

Being I've been on both sides in dealing with drug addicts, I am disgusted that the dope is flowing to our shores again from Afghanistan, Colombia, China and all the other lovely countries who see fit to addict the addicts...It disgusts me Chase...

17 posted on 11/26/2001 4:51:51 PM PST by KLT
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To: Black Jade
The choice is between crazy-mullah regime and opium-growing corrupt regime. The first one exports jihad, the second one drugs.

Of course, one may attempt nation-building and try to pull Afghanistan to the ranks of more developed countries through massive aid and loans.

18 posted on 11/26/2001 5:13:31 PM PST by madrussian
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Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

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