Counternarcotics agency burns more than 500 kilos of narcotics today

DUSHANBE, October 23, 2009, Asia-Plus  — The Drug Control Agency (DCA) burned some 560 kilograms of narcotics today morning.  A totaled included 140 kilograms of heroin, 187 kilograms of raw opium and 218 kilograms of cannabis. The drugs were confiscated in the course of 2008-2009 and they were destroyed in the presence of representatives of […]

Nargis Hamroboyeva

DUSHANBE, October 23, 2009, Asia-Plus  — The Drug Control Agency (DCA) burned some 560 kilograms of narcotics today morning.  A totaled included 140 kilograms of heroin, 187 kilograms of raw opium and 218 kilograms of cannabis.

The drugs were confiscated in the course of 2008-2009 and they were destroyed in the presence of representatives of a special commission, international organizations, law enforcement agencies and media.

This is the second burning conducted by the counternarcotics agency in 2009.  In all, 1,791 tons of narcotics have been burned by the DCA this year.         

In the meantime, UN anti-crime chief calls for scaled-up resistance against Afghan drugs trafficking

On October 21, UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa called for intensified efforts to combat the devastating global impact of Afghanistan’s multi-billion dollar opium trade, fuelling addiction, the spread of HIV, a rise in criminal activity, as well as insurgencies and terrorism, UN News Center reported.

Afghanistan produces almost all the world’s opium – the raw material for heroin – which has a $65 billion global market catering to 15 million addicts, causing up to 100,000 deaths per year, spreading HIV at an unprecedented rate, and funding the Taliban and Al-Qaida, according to a new UN Offices on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report.

“I urge the friends of Afghanistan to recognize that, to a large extent, these uncomfortable truths may be the result of their benign neglect,” said Afghanistan traffics some 900 tons of opium, 92 per cent of the total world’s production, and 350 tons of heroin every year across its porous borders, over Balkan and Eurasian drug routes and into Europe, Russia, India and China, said the report.

Spotlighting corruption and lawlessness in Afghanistan, as well as its uncontrolled borders, as the root of the problem, the report noted that just 2 per cent of opiates produced are seized by authorities in the country, compared to 36 per cent of cocaine produced in Colombia.

In addition, the “Addiction, Crime and Insurgency: The transnational threat of Afghan opium” report noted that in the south and east of the country, smuggling prospers because of centuries-old Pashtun and Baluchi cross-border tribal links, the chaos caused by insurgency, disregard for international obligations in Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), and the violation of trade transit agreements with neighbors.  “The Afghanistan-Pakistan border region has turned into the world’s largest free trade zone in anything and everything that is illicit – drugs of course, but also weapons, bomb-making equipment, chemical precursors, drug money, even people and migrants,” said Mr. Costa.

The report highlights that 20 per cent of Afghan opiate shipments are intercepted worldwide, compared to twice as much for cocaine from Andean countries, and while Iran seizes 20 per cent of the illicit drug crossing its borders, Russia confiscated just 5 per cent and European Union (EU) countries, such as Bulgaria, Greece and Romania, captured less than 2 per cent of their opiate trade.

“The Taliban’s direct involvement in the opium trade allows them to fund a war machine that is becoming technologically more complex and increasingly widespread,” said Mr. Costa. “Newly born narco-cartels in and around Afghanistan are blurring the difference between greed and ideology.”

Mr. Costa said that many of the drug barons, with links to insurgency, are known to Afghan and foreign intelligence services.  “Why have their names not been submitted to the UN Security Council… in order to ban their travel and seize their assets?”

He warned that the “perfect storm” of drugs and terrorism that has swamped the Afghanistan-Pakistan border for years, may be heading to Central Asia, threatening to engulf the region in large-scale terrorism and endangering its massive energy resources.

The report notes that the number of people dying every year from drug overdoses in NATO countries – around 10,000 – is five times higher than the total number of NATO troops killed in Afghanistan in the past eight years.  And over 30,000 Russians are dying annually from Afghan drugs, which is more than the total number of Red Army soldiers who died in their 10-year Afghan war.

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