| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"Black Elk" |
| Date: |
18 Nov 2004 07:38:10 PM |
| Object: |
UN warns of Afghan 'drug state' |
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4022197.stm
UN warns of Afghan 'drug state'
The UN has warned that Afghanistan could become a "narco-state" after
opium cultivation rose by two-thirds this year.
A UN report released on Thursday urged the US and Nato forces to fight
drugs as well as Taleban insurgents.
It said Afghanistan now supplied 87% of world opium. In 2003, the trade
was worth $2.8bn, representing more than 60% of gross domestic product.
One in 10 Afghans are now estimated to be involved in the business.
The UN said it would be an "historical error" to abandon the nation to
opium.
'No silver bullet'
The UN Afghanistan Opium Survey 2004 said the drug was now the "main
engine of economic growth and the strongest bond among previously
quarrelsome peoples".
It said opium cultivation had increased by 64% compared to 2003.
Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and
Crime, said the report was a wake-up call to the world.
Mr Costa said the Afghan government was too weak to tackle the problem
alone.
He called on US and Nato-led forces to carry out military operations
against drug traffickers.
"In Afghanistan, drugs are now a clear and present danger," Mr Costa said.
"The fear that Afghanistan might degenerate into a narco-state is
becoming a reality."
He said there was "no silver bullet" with which to tackle the problem.
"The opium economy in Afghanistan has to be dismantled with democracy,
the rule of law and economic improvement - it will be a long and
difficult process," Mr Costa said.
The UN report said opium production in 2004 was close to the peak of
4,600 tons in 1999, a year before the Taleban banned new cultivation.
The BBC's Roland Buerk in Kabul says it is easy to see why 2.3m people -
a tenth of the population - is involved in opium, when a farmer can earn
more than 10 times as much growing poppies than cultivating wheat.
Our correspondent says Afghanistan's Counter-Narcotics Directorate is
calling for a "jihad", or holy war, against drugs.
Its head, Mirwais Yasini, said he would welcome military help to tackle
drug traffickers and laboratories.
US prosecutions
The UN report came as the US announced a major new offensive against
drug production in Afghanistan.
Washington expects to spend an extra $780m in the next financial year on
measures including the eradication of poppies and alternatives for farmers.
US officials describe the new plan as a full-board commitment to support
the new Afghan government in its battle against the growing drugs trade.
A senior Western diplomat in Kabul also told the BBC there were plans to
take some of the largest drugs barons to the United States to prosecute
them there.
Robert Charles, assistant secretary of state for International Narcotics
and Law Enforcement, described poppy cultivation as a primary, if not
the primary, concern for the country.
Aggressive eradication would be backed up, Mr Charles said, by a public
information campaign, better law enforcement and, perhaps most
crucially, real alternatives for farmers.
"You don't go in and eradicate in an area without making provision...
for a marked up or added alternative development resources, or
alternative livelihoods," he said.
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| User: "Docky Wocky" |
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| Title: Re: UN warns of Afghan 'drug state' |
18 Nov 2004 09:11:23 PM |
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Looks to me like the United Nations big shots might be planning on getting a
piece of the Afghan drug action - just to replace what they lost when the
Iraqi Oil For Food scam got shot down.
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| User: "Benny" |
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| Title: Re: UN warns of Afghan 'drug state' |
18 Nov 2004 09:14:31 PM |
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"Docky Wocky" wrote
Looks to me like the United Nations big shots might be planning on getting
a
piece of the Afghan drug action - just to replace what they lost when the
Iraqi Oil For Food scam got shot down.
You really think the CIA is willing to share?
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| User: "Roedy Green" |
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| Title: Re: UN warns of Afghan 'drug state' |
18 Nov 2004 09:28:02 PM |
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On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 18:38:10 -0700, Black Elk <rc@hotmail.com> wrote
or quoted :
UN warns of Afghan 'drug state'
The UN has warned that Afghanistan could become a "narco-state" after
opium cultivation rose by two-thirds this year.
could it be a co-incidence? Afghanistan back up to #1 heroin producer
after the US invades supplying over 80% of the planet's heroin?
Columbia #1 cocaine producer after the US gives it more than half of
its military AID.
The drug trade is big money and the CIA controls it. It must really
suck to be an American knowing how utterly corrupt your government has
become.
see http://mindprod.com/election.html for how Bush stole the 2004
election and ended the great American experiment in democracy.
--
Canadian Mind Products, Roedy Green.
See http://mindprod.com/iraq.html photos of Bush's war crimes
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| User: "Benny" |
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| Title: Re: UN warns of Afghan 'drug state' |
19 Nov 2004 05:00:12 PM |
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"Roedy Green" wrote
The drug trade is big money and the CIA controls it. It must really
suck to be an American knowing how utterly corrupt your government has
become.
It's not that the government has become corrupt, it's how openly they let
their corruption known that bothers me. Still, there are those which to
refuse to believe the US is the most corrupt government in the world. What
can ya say?
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