Diplomatic Traffic
Afghanistan's huge poppy-growing industry is a cause of alarm and worry in the international community, and there have been calls for the alliance that ousted the Taliban and now secures the government of President Hamid Karzai to clamp down on poppy growing and help farmers find alternatives.
The total income from production, processing
and trafficking of opium in 2003, was approximately $2.3 billion. It is
estimated that this equals 52 percent of the country's official 2002
gross domestic product, or more than one-third of the total economy.
As
the 2004 Human Development Report points out, these staggering figures
not only reflect the growth and magnitude of the illicit opium economy
in Afghanistan but also the pervasive poverty of the country.
However,
eliminating this industry is not an easy task for anyone. The heroin
industry flourishes at times of instability and insecurity, since it
provides farmers with incomes considerably greater than what they can
earn with traditional crops. Hence, we would argue that the best way to
eliminate the poppy growing industry in our country, and the heroin
trade it supports, is to enhance the security and wellbeing of our
people, especially in the destitute rural communities. Our farmers need
opportunities that will allow them to work in legal production and
distribution activities.
The cover of Afghanistan's first
Human Development Report is a graphic depiction of the plight of most
Afghans. It shows hands reaching through a chain-link barrier to reach
basic means of survival: water, food, electricity, shelter, sanitation
and medicine in a secure environment maintained by the rule of law. The
cover shows that Afghans seek social and economic security beyond
protection from violence and conflict.
The 316-page report
discusses causes, and possible remedies, for Afghanistan's low state of
development. The country currently has some of the world's lowest
social and economic indicators, ranking it 173 out of 178 nations on
the 2004 Human Development Index.
United Nations Secretary
General Kofi Annan once defined human security as embracing "far more
than the absence of violent conflict. It encompasses human rights, good
governance, access to education and healthcare and ensuring that each
individual has opportunities and choices to fulfill his or her
potential." He went on to say that, "Every step in this direction is
also a step towards reducing poverty, achieving economic growth and
preventing conflict." In Afghanistan, over two decades of civil war
have destroyed the basic conditions of human security and allowed a
boom in the illicit opium economy.
Before the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979, Afghans were self-sufficient in food production. Agricultural produce accounted for 30 percent of exports, earning the country $100 million annually in foreign exchange. In addition, social capital embedded in the Afghan culture cushioned Afghans against life's hardships. However, destructive conflicts during the decade-long Soviet occupation devastated Afghanistan's agricultural economy and decimated rural communities where social fragmentation replaced the social cohesion which previously insulated Afghans against economic difficulties.
From 1992-2001, internecine factional infighting
increased suffering in Afghanistan and culminated in the advent of the
Taliban who seized power from fractious rulers. As is now known to the
whole world, the Taliban, alongside global terrorists, further
victimized the people of Afghanistan and made their economic lot a
great deal more miserable.
It is in this context of extreme
human insecurity caused by years of violent war and destruction of
agricultural life that Afghan peasants have come to rely on opium poppy
cultivation as a way of survival. Drug mafia with domestic, regional,
and international criminal networks have capitalized on this economic
need and vulnerability to engage more than 2.3 million poor farmers in
opium poppy cultivation, now found throughout Afghanistan.
Peasants
remain extremely poor, however, as most of the drug revenues go to
usurious landlords, traffickers, drug traders, narco-warlords and
corrupt government officials. These criminal groups benefit from a weak
central government and general instability in the country, and they
work together to undermine the consolidation of central government
authority and security in Afghanistan.
The Afghan government
understands the nexus between extreme poverty and opium poppy
cultivation and has made every effort to enhance human security as a
long-term solution to eliminating the drug problem in Afghanistan. The
country's National Drug Control Strategy prioritizes the need to reduce
poverty and recommends countrywide rural development assistance as an
effective counter-narcotics measure.
The strategy cautions
against quick-fix eradication solutions that can suddenly destroy the
only means of survival for millions of poor peasants before providing
them with alternative livelihoods. Doing so will indeed ensure the
alienation of a vast majority of destitute peasants who would make easy
recruits for the Taliban insurgency and the terrorists threatening the
process of peace-building in Afghanistan.
The government's
2005 Counter Narcotics Implementation Plan opposes short-term
eradication policies, including the use of aerial spray. Instead, it
proposes a longer-term integrated counter-narcotics strategy to
strengthen human security in rural Afghanistan through social and
economic assistance, while building judicial and law enforcement
capacity to target and bring to justice the real drivers and
beneficiaries of the illicit opium economy.
The strategy's
success hinges on increased, well-coordinated development aid from the
international community. Afghanistan's success in eliminating its drug
problem will not only emancipate its impoverished citizens and secure
their future, but also enhance regional security and development and
save the health and lives of many in the world.
M.
Ashraf Haidari is Spokesman at the Embassy of Afghanistan and Peace
Scholar in International Security & Development at Georgetown
University in Washington, DC.
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