Monday, July 02, 2007

UN: World Drug Problem Stabilising (But Afghanistan Has Record Opium Crop)

Taken from Al-Jezeera News Agency, JUNE 26, 2007

Efforts to tackle the world's drug problems appear to be having some success as cultivation, production and abuse have stabilised worldwide, according to a United Nations agency.

The Vienna-based UN Office on Drugs and Crime said the Golden Triangle in southeast Asia, once one of the largest sources for heroin, was now "almost opium free".

Antonio Maria Costa, the head of UNODC, said in a statement late on Monday: "Recent data show that the runaway train of drug addiction has slowed down."



But the successes were masked by soaring production in southern Afghanistan which is now responsible for 92 per cent of opium production.

Costa said: "For almost all drugs - cocaine, heroin, cannabis and amphetamines - there are signs of overall stability, whether we speak of production, trafficking or consumption."

Poppy cultivation, which can be used to produce heroin, morphine and opium, has fallen by about 80 per cent since 2000 in the Golden Triangle, which includes parts of Laos, Myanmar and Thailand.

But despite the dramatic fall in southeast Asia, opium production reached a record 6,610 tonnes worldwide last year, up 43 per cent from 2005.

Afghanistan expansion
This was due to a near 50 per cent increase in production in Afghanistan.

The area under opium poppy cultivation in the country also expanded, from 1,040 sq km in 2005, to 1,650 sq km in 2006 - an increase of about 59 per cent.

"This is the largest area under opium poppy cultivation ever recorded in Afghanistan," the report said, noting that 62 per cent of the cultivation was concentrated in the country's southern region.

"For no other drug is production so concentrated in a single area."

Costa said Helmand province was becoming the world's biggest drug supplier, with illicit cultivation there larger than in the rest of the country put together.
'Drug cancer'

"Effective surgery on Helmand's drug and insurgency cancer will rid the world of the most dangerous source of its most dangerous narcotic and go a long way to bringing security to the region," Costa said in a statement.

Income from the industry in Afghanistan is more than $3bn annually.

Sophisticated laboratories inside Afghanistan are now converting 90 per cent of their opium into heroin and morphine before smuggling it around the world, UNODC officials said before the report's release. Until two years ago, Afghanistan exported the drug almost exclusively in its raw form.

The area used for coca cultivation - the raw material for producing cocaine - dropped by 29 per cent between 2000 and 2006, and by 52 per cent in Colombia alone.

But, although cultivation dropped last year, as much cocaine was produced worldwide as in 2005, "apparently due to improvements in coca cultivation and cocaine production technology," the report said.

Cocaine consumption
It also noted that while cocaine demand was decreasing in North America, "consumption increased significantly in Europe, doubling or tripling in several countries over the last decade".

The report expressed concerns about the situation in Africa, suggesting it could find itself at the crossroads of international drug crime.

"There are warning signs that Africa is also under attack, targeted by cocaine traffickers from the west - Colombia - and heroin smugglers in the east - Afghanistan," it said.

"This threat needs to be addressed quickly to stamp out drug-related crime, money-laundering and corruption, and to prevent the spread of drug use that could cause havoc across a continent already plagued by other tragedies."

Cannabis, or marijuana, remained the most widely used drug. Of the 200 million people (aged 15-64) who are drug-users, about 160 million take cannabis, the report said.

But Costa remained positive, noting that "for the first time in years, we do not see an upward trend in the global production and consumption of cannabis".

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Allied forces have been in Afghanistan since it’s invasion on October 7, 2001. So what have the United States, aided by the United Kingdom, Canada, and supported by a coalition of other countries including several from the NATO alliance done to reduce this evil crop that the Taliban had almost eroded – The only way to kill off addiction and demand for drugs in the West is to kill off the supply or kill the flow of supply. I doubt if governments in the West are bothered to deal with this issue otherwise we would not be talking about this subject.

Some Fast Facts (Taken from the Time, UK)
# A 49% increase in opium production in Afghanistan has seen a new record in the world production.
# Afghanistan accounts for 92% of global illict opium production.
# Of the 11m heroin addicts in the world, 3.3m of them in Europe.
# Cannabis is consumed by 160m people worldwide.
# Over the 2005-2006 period, 25m people are estimated to have used amphetamines at least once in the previous 12 months· More than 12% of Afghanistan's population is involved in poppy cultivation.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Drugs are a convenient scapegoat for an element of society that's always trying to fix things that don't want to be fixed (at least not in that context...perhaps others...sorry, bad drug joke.) It's always easier to blame social problems like crime or unemployment on recreational drug use than it is to actually figure out what the real problems are. Drug use is not a problem in and of itself; it CAN be one, it very often isn't.

Drugs stay illegal, even marijuana with the exciting newer data suggesting it really ought to be studied as an anti-cancer medicine, because as black-market product there's simply too much money in it, and I don't just mean for dealers and poppy farmers.

Pot stays illegal because it means cops have an easy excuse to search anyone who looks or behaves a little bit unconventionally, and if they've got drugs, what the State has is a (usually) non-violent person, usually in his or her young adulthood. These people can end up in jail for five or ten years for just being in the wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong people, having nothing to even do with drugs. Money changes hands, judges either are bribed or driven by some need to do it "for the children" and their glorious drug-free future that is not going to happen by force, and will be desired only by non drug users who are perfectly free to have one if they desire.

The ones who end up in jail are making money for a whole bunch of corporate outfits, mostly Corrections Corp of America which spreads out over about 11 states - you think there's no such thing as slavery in the USA? Prison labor is cheaper than outsourcing overseas. If drug use stopped there'd be an economic meltdown...overnight!

Drug users who are jailed for simply holding or using drugs who've not been messing with guns, selling to kids or driving under the influence don't belong in prison. So why are they taking up about four-fifths of the space in all the prisons? I want the people robbing, raping and killing people in those cells, not these harmless people who've got various levels of mental impairment at worst, and some of that was there before drugs and is what they are self-medicate for in the first place.

Stop drug production in one place and it just pops up elsewhere, funneling funds to crooks, terrorists, corrupt cops, the Mob, the Yakuza, and so on, and it will NEVER stop until drug plant cultivation is no longer illegal.

I love the clever trick the antidrug gov agencies play on us. If they can come up with data saying drug use is going DOWN they tell Congress "we need more funds to keep doing this good successful work" and if the statistics indicate more folks are taking tokes, well, they plead with Congress saying "we need more funds to quell this threat to our most vital resource - our young people." (I really find that stupid phrase to be offensive, I'm sure 15 year olds love being told they're a 'resource'.)

Drugs have to be legal or the subcultural outlaw glamour thing is always going to create new demand. It sure worked on me. It still does, by creating a culture where maladjusted people are welcome and instantly fit in.

Legalise it--ALL of it! and it loses all that glamour, and the cost plummets since anyone can grow pot or poppies or coca with not much effort, they grow like...weeds. Would drug use go up and rot civilization? Probably it would increase for 5 years or so and level off, then go down, steadily, since that drug-culture thing and that money thing would stop calling us. And people with sense will see what to do and not to do, while the huge cartels fall, and our tax dollars can stop going to forcing people to stop smoking flowers!