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19 April 2024

Afghanistan opium production set to rise 61%: UN

Published
By AFP

Opium production in Afghanistan, which fuels the Taliban insurgency, is set to rise by nearly two-thirds as prices soar after last year's harvest was blighted by disease, the United Nations said on Tuesday.

Ten years after the 2001 US-led invasion to drive the Taliban from power, Afghanistan produces 90 percent of the world's illegal opium, funding much of the militia's insurgency despite an expensive Western eradication programme.

The UN said that cultivation of the poppy crop reached 131,000 hectares in 2011, seven percent higher than in 2010 "due to insecurity and high prices", said the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in its annual opium survey.

And with the crop yield per hectare up markedly from last year, overall production would potentially rise by 61 percent on last year, the report said.

The increased amount of land under opium production indicates a major failure on the part of NATO's civilian partners -- notably provincial reconstruction teams -- to convince farmers to switch to alternative crops.

The price of dry opium rose 43 percent this year compared to 2010 and total farm-gate income is set to increase by 133 percent to reach $1.4 billion in 2011, or nine percent of Afghanistan's GDP, the report said.

"If the profits of manufacturing and trafficking heroin are added to this figure, opium is a significant part of the Afghan economy and provides considerable funding to the insurgency and fuels corruption," it said.

"We cannot afford to ignore the record profits for non-farmers, such as traders and insurgents, which in turn fuel corruption, criminality and instability," said UNODC country head Jean-Luc Lemahieu.

"This is a distressing situation."

About 78 percent of cultivation was concentrated in southern Afghanistan, the heartland of the Taliban-led insurgency and where the United States has concentrated a troop "surge" designed to beat back the militia's influence.

Another 17 percent was produced in the lawless and remote southwest, which include the most insecure provinces in the country, the report said.

"This confirms the link between insecurity and opium cultivation observed since 2007," it said.

Lemahieu said that on average the drugs trade made a $2 billion profit in Afghanistan between 2001 and 2010, turning into a $66 billion profit abroad.

Within the $2 billion in Afghanistan, he said 10 percent went to insurgents and about 20 percent to farmers.

He said a question mark hung over the remaining $1.4 billion, believing most of it was devoured by corruption and criminality. But last year, prices rose more than 300 percent.

"Today the farmers are making $1.4 billion... potentially the insurgency this year will make $700 million, and I let you calculate how much will go to corruption within this country," Lemahieu said.

Afghan authorities have been trying to rid the country of illicit opium production with help from its international allies since the Taliban were ousted from power in a US-led invasion in late 2001.

"The total amount of hectares eradicated increased by 65 percent in 2011. However, the area eradicated represents only three percent of the total cultivation area," Lemahieu quoted UNODC chief Yury Fedotov as saying.

"While there has been progress in some counternarcotics areas, the medium term indicators for opium production are not positive," he added.

Experts say the Taliban's involvement in the drugs trade stretches from direct facilitation -- such as providing farmers with seed, fertiliser and cash advances on their crop -- to distribution and protection.