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Afghan opium production soars to record levels

Young men in the poppy fields of Helmand Province, southern Afghanistan. Helmand alone produces about 50 percent of Afghanistan's annual 8,200 metric tonnes of opium. Abdullah Shaheen/IRIN
Opium production in Afghanistan increased by 17 percent in 2007, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said on 27 August.

"No other country in the world has ever produced narcotics on such a deadly scale," said the Afghanistan Opium Survey 2007, an annual assessment prepared by UNODC and the government of Afghanistan.

Afghan farmers have cultivated poppies on 193,000 hectares which will produce 8,200 metric tonnes of opium in 2007, the survey indicated. Afghanistan alone accounts for 93 percent of the heroin processed in the world.

The UN has warned that Afghanistan's opium production has reached a "frighteningly new level" which threatens the war-battered country's painful struggle for stability, reconstruction and development.

Over three million Afghans are said to be involved in the narcotics trade (cultivation, processing and smuggling) and the UN believes the illicit opium income fuels insurgency and other criminal activities in Afghanistan.

More on opium in Afghanistan


Photo: Abdullah Shaheen/IRIN

 Demand for narcotics outstrips available treatment for drug addicts
 UN World Drug Report 2007
 Girls and women traded for opium debts
 Lack of resources and high failure rate undermine addiction treatment programmes
 UNODC 2007 World Drug Report video
  Opium abuse video
 This video short looks at opium abuse among women and children in north eastern Afghanistan. Afghanistan is the world's leading producer of illicit opium.
  
[English]
[Duration: 01:30]
Opium production in Afghanistan in 2007 "may kill, directly or not" over 100,000 people worldwide, UNODC reported.

Most narcotics deaths are likely to happen in China, India and southeast Asia where Afghan opium exports have increasingly found new markets. Europe is another potential buyer of drugs produced in landlocked Afghanistan. Over 90 percent of the heroin sold on black markets in the UK originates from Afghanistan, according to the UN.

On 26 June UNODC said there was a significant reduction in drug addiction and abuse everywhere in the world, except in Afghanistan where more people are falling prey to narcotics.

Over one million Afghans are addicted to narcotics - 3.7 percent of Afghanistan's 24.5 million population, according to the Afghan government.

Poverty driving cultivation

Most Afghans involved in the opium trade have opted for this unlawful business in order to alleviate their poverty, the 2007 opium survey found.

What is driving farmers to defy the government's ban and cultivate poppy is a price for opium that easily outstrips that of any other agricultural products.

"Most farmers (98 per cent) said they would be ready to stop opium poppy cultivation should access to alternative livelihoods be provided," the UNODC report said.

Afghan farmers will earn about US$1 billion (farm-gate price) from their opium harvest in 2007, representing 13 percent of the country's $7.5 billion total gross domestic product (GDP), the UN survey said.

The opium survey noted the vast difference in income of farmers who cultivate opium and those who grow wheat. Gross income for wheat per hectare of land was $546 while for opium it was $5,200.

Opium-free provinces

However, the Afghan government has been able to take some comfort from the UNODC report: In 2006 out of 34 Afghan provinces six were assessed as poppy-free, while in 2007, 13 provinces, mainly in central and northern Afghanistan, were assessed as opium-free.

"We should increase the number of poppy-free provinces every year and gradually get Afghanistan rid of this vicious phenomenon," Zalmai Afzali, a spokesman for Afghanistan's Ministry of Counter Narcotics, told IRIN on 27 August.

Afghan officials, however, warn that unless the international donor community provides generous funding for counter-narcotics efforts, including funding for alternative livelihoods and institution building, opium production would remain a disturbing challenge.

Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of UNODC, has also called for more funding to be used to curb Afghanistan's growing opium production.

"Expenditure [on counter narcotics] is abysmally low because of ministerial competition, corruption and bureaucratic inertia - nationally and internationally," Costa said.

The UNODC has also called on the government of Afghanistan to intensify its opium eradication activities and target "rich landlords especially in the south of the country".

Afghanistan poppy/opium statistics 2006-7


2006

Difference

2007
Net opium poppy cultivation area in hectares 165,000 ha+17%193,000 ha 
Percent of agricultural land 3.65%
4.27 %
Number of poppy-free provinces6
13
Eradication area in hectares15,300ha +24% 19,047 ha
Potential production of opium (in metric tonnes)6,100mt+34% 8,200 mt
Percent of global production 92%
93%
Number of persons involved in opium cultivation 2.9 million+14%3.3 million
Total farm-gate value of opium productionUS$0.76 billion+12%$1 billion
Total farm-gate value of opium as percent of GDP 11%
13%
Indicative gross income from opium per hectare $4600+13%$5200
Indicative gross income from wheat per hectare $530+3%$546

Source: UNODC, Afghanistan Opium Survey 2007


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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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