04/11/2007 00:00:00
The War on Poppy Succeeds, but Cannabis Thrives in an Afghan Province
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The War on Poppy Succeeds, but Cannabis Thrives in an Afghan Province.
KHWAJA GHOLAK, Afghanistan — Amid the multiplying frustrations of the
fight against narcotics in Afghanistan, the northern province of Balkh
has been hailed as a rare and glowing success.
Two years ago the province, which abuts Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, was
covered with opium poppies — about 27,000 acres of them, nearly enough
to blanket Manhattan twice. This year, after an intense anti-poppy
campaign led by the governor, Balkh’s farmers abandoned the crop. The
province was declared poppy free, with 12 others, and the provincial
government was promised a reward of millions of dollars in development aid.
But largely ignored in the celebration was the fact that many farmers in
Balkh simply switched from opium poppies to another illegal crop:
cannabis, the herb from which marijuana and hashish are derived.
As the Afghan and Western governments focused on the problem of soaring
Afghan opium production, which hit record levels this year and remains a
booming industry, cannabis cultivation increased 40 percent around the
country, to about 173,000 acres this year — from about 123,500 acres
last year, the United Nations said in an August report. And even though
hashish is less expensive per weight than opium or heroin, the report
said, cannabis can potentially earn a farmer more than opium poppies
because it yields twice the quantity of drug per acre and is cheaper and
less labor intensive to grow.
“As a consequence,” the United Nations report warned, “farmers who do
not cultivate opium poppy may turn to cannabis cultivation.”
Many farmers in Balkh have done just that, officials and residents say,
and the province now has one of the most bounteous cannabis crops in the
country.
The plant is certainly not hard to find. It lines the main highways
leading into Mazar-i-Sharif, the provincial capital, and is visible to
passing drivers. The crop’s chief byproduct, hashish, is sold openly at
many roadside fruit and grocery stands, particularly around Balkh, the
ancient citadel town about 15 miles west of Mazar-i-Sharif.
Late on an October afternoon, Muhammad Ayud, 30, a kindly sharecropper,
was finishing a day of work at the three-acre parcel he farms here in
this poor village just outside the town of Balkh. His plot was covered
by a forest of cannabis plants, some more than nine feet tall.
“This is nothing,” he said, gesturing toward the towering plants. “If
you give it real fertilizer, you’d see how tall it grows!”
Last year Mr. Ayud’s parcel was mostly opium poppies. But his crop was
wiped out by government officials during a campaign led by the
provincial governor, Atta Mohammad Noor, who jailed dozens of growers
for disobeying him and personally waded into several poppy fields
swinging a stick at the flower stems.
Mr. Ayud, one of only two wage earners in his 16-member family, lost
most of his expected earnings for the year, about $1,000, he said.
This year he planted cannabis instead, with some cotton as a fallback in
case the government followed through on its promises to eradicate the
illicit crop. It was a return to a family tradition, he said. His father
and grandfather grew cannabis here.
Mr. Ayud said he knew it was illegal to grow cannabis, but that it was
the only crop that would produce enough profit to feed his family. “I
don’t have anything else to grow,” he said. The difference in potential
earnings is vast: cannabis can earn about twice the profits of a legal
crop like cotton, local officials say.
Farmers in this region have cultivated cannabis for more than 70 years
and, by the estimates of several Balkh residents, at least half the
adult male population smokes hashish. Resinous, pungent and black, the
hashish is sold in thin, palm-size sheets that resemble large tire
patches and sell for about a dollar each. Hashish from this area —
called Shirak-i-Mazar, or Milk of Mazar — was once prized by smokers
around the world, though its primacy has since been supplanted by
varieties from other countries.
Many farmers here, as elsewhere in Afghanistan, process the cannabis
into hashish in their homes, then sell it to traffickers who come to
their doors to pick it up. The best hashish is exported, residents here
say, while the inferior stuff is consumed nationally.
Mr. Atta says he has a plan to eradicate cannabis next growing season.
Farmers have begun to harvest their current crop, and officials say they
do not want to destroy the farmers’ livelihood without giving them time
to plant an alternative.
“Marijuana is not difficult to control, like poppy,” the governor said
in an interview in October in his vast, opulent office in
Mazar-i-Sharif. “It’s very easy to eradicate. It’s a very simple issue.”
But Mr. Atta said he was still waiting for the development money that
the central government and international community had promised Balkh in
return for ridding itself of opium poppies. The money — he puts it at
more than $5 million; officials in the central government say it is
closer to $3 million — is earmarked for a range of projects including
rural development programs to promote farming alternatives to poppies
and cannabis.
Mr. Atta cautioned that unless the money arrived promptly, he could not
guarantee that the farmers would eschew poppies.
“It’s the responsibility of the central government and international
community to improve the lives of farmers, which they aren’t doing,” he
said. “Well, we’ll try our best to not let them grow poppy, but it’s
going to cause problems.”
Many farmers around the town of Balkh suggested that forswearing
cannabis might be harder than poppies. Not only are cannabis and hashish
a more integral part of their customs, they said, but beyond cannabis
there are no profitable alternatives.
The farmers said they would not grow cannabis only if the government
provided an alternative source of livelihood, or improved the market for
their legal crops.
“If, in the future, the government helps the farmers — and really helps
— we will destroy all the poppy and cannabis,” said Hoshdel, 40, a
well-weathered farmer in Khwaja Gholak who has nine children. “If they
don’t help us, I swear I’ll grow it.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/04/world/asia/04cannabis.html
Source:
http://www.ukcia.org/news/shownewsarticle.php?articleid=12983
Author:
New York Times via UKCIA
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