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Sixty-year-old
Shah Jahan, who lives in the remote mountains of Kohistan in the
Wari subdivision of the Frontier, is not intimidated in the least
by the government clampdown on the poppy crop. Although he has witnessed
a number of shootouts between the law-enforcing authorities, and
the growers, he says that the tribals will not back down on the
issue of protecting their own livelihood.
He recalls a fierce battle during the '60s when tribesmen
refused to pay government-imposed taxes on cutting trees. "The
gunbattle lasted for over a week, but we refused to give in,"
he says proudly, scratching his grey beard. "At an age when
children in the cities are still learning to hold their milk bottles,
our children are taught to handle guns," he adds nonchalantly,
displaying a locally made pistol.
The
tribesmen had agreed to stop growing poppy a few years ago after
they were persuaded to do so by their tribal elders. In return,
they were promised that their areas would be developed. "Everybody
knows that the government cannot cow us down through guns. We listen
only to our tribal elders because that is our culture and our way
of life," says Shah Jahan.
After
a lull of five years, most of these tribesmen have returned to cultivating
the banned poppy crop as past promises remain unmet. Poppy growers
cultivate crops on small landholdings, which make high monetary
returns for the crop a prerequisite for survival. Non-availability
of other high earning crops and a lack of alternate sources of livelihood
are factors contributing to the resumption of poppy cultivation.
Although international donor agencies like the United Nations
Drug Control Programme have allocated generous funds for the development
of these areas, local people remain skeptical of the outcome. "I
don't know where this development has taken place; it must be in
the files alone," comments Shah Jahan sarcastically, pointing
towards the surrounding villages, where people still ride for miles
on mules' backs to fetch drinking water.
After
the initial ban on poppy cultivation, most tribesmen switched over
to legal crops such as wheat, vegetables and fruit. Growing wheat
instead of poppy in small agricultural holdings resulted in financial
ruin for most of the villagers. "Most of the villagers went
hungry during these years - we hardly earned enough for three meals
a day," says Shah Jehan. "Whereas we used to earn in hundreds
of thousand rupees from the poppy yield every year, we barely made
20 to 30 thousand rupees a year from the wheat crop. How can an
average family unit, consisting of 20 to 30 people, survive on this
meagre income?" he questions.
Compelled by harsh living conditions and encouraged by the
resumption of poppy cultivation in neighbouring Afghanistan, thousands
of villagers in the tribal areas of Pakistan have opted to grow
poppy during the current season. None of these villagers appear
fearful of facing the law-enforcing agencies and believe that if
pushed to the wall, they can defend themselves. "As you know,
a hungry wolf can fight a wild lion, so anyone who tries to ruin
our crop is in for a fight," contends Shah Jahan referring
to the anti-narcotics agencies.
The villagers in Kohistan are fully convinced that their
actions are justified. "If we grow poppy, we will survive,
and if we don't, somebody else will survive. But why should we die
to save somebody else's life?" asks another tribesman of the
same village. "We were at the verge of death after a four-year-long
drought, but nobody bothered about our welfare during this period."
Most
villagers assert that they will only stop growing poppy if the government
helps them out financially. "There is a simple formula, you
scratch my back and I'll scratch yours," said one of the villagers
smilingly.
Besides
the higher financial returns it provides, poppy cultivation is less
laborious and requires less water compared to other crops. The farmers
also lack the expertise needed to cultivate other crops. They get
advance payments from the drug traffickers during the sowing season
and once the crop is ready, don't need to worry about transporting
it to the market or locating buyers. "Once the crop is at the
final stage, traffickers collect the yield and pay in cash on the
spot. In most cases, a good price is all but guaranteed," says
Shah Jahan.
Officials
of the Pakistani anti-narcotics police vehemently deny that poppy
is being cultivated in the bordering areas of Afghanistan, saying
that they are presently being manned by Pakistan army scouts. However,
a visit to some of these areas and an independent survey carried
out by a private NGO reveals that poppy seeds have been sown in
all the seven tribal agencies of the Pakistani tribally administered
areas, including regions which had never been known to grow the
crop.
One
such report released last month by Environ Tech, a Pakistan-based
NGO, cites the Betani area, Tank, Kohat, Bisham, Swabi, Upper and
Lower Dir, Mansehra, Thal and Diamer. "The illicit crop has
been cultivated on a total of 20,000 hectares of land in the tribal
belt and the Frontier province," the report contends, expressing
fear that the Pakistani tribal belt will regain its status as a
major poppy, opium and drug production centre.
Besides
regions of the Pakistani Frontier province, sources have disclosed
that poppy has also been cultivated on at least two to three thousand
hectares of land in Kila Abdullah, Gulistan and other tribal areas
of Balochistan, as well as neighbouring Afghanistan. "Much
of the crop has already been harvested in some parts of NWFP province,
while it is on the verge of being harvested in other areas,"
contends one insider.
Other
than the surge of poppy growth in Pakistan's tribal areas, international
agencies working against poppy production are also concerned about
the production of a bumper crop in Afghanistan, where these agencies
have estimated a record yield of 4,600 tons, more than the cultivation
in the rest of the world put together. Despite the fact that the
Karzai government has banned the cultivation, processing, trafficking
and consumption of heroin in the country, agencies involved in combating
drug trafficking believe that more enforcement is needed to help
eradicate poppy cultivation in Afghanistan.
Officials
reveal that as a result of a bumper crop in Afghanistan and the
surge in poppy cultivation in the Pakistani tribal areas, the price
of poppy has declined by at least 20 to 30 per cent. "The pre-season
price of one kilogram of poppy was around 50,000 rupees, but the
same amount is now available at 35 to 45 thousand Pak rupees,"
says an official. Attracted by lower prices of heroin, many international
drug dealers have become active in the region. "Within no time,
this deadly drug will travel to every nook and corner of the country,"
he warns.
Over
much of Afghanistan and the tribal areas of Pakistan, poppy is a
traditional cash crop, feeding 70 to 80 per cent of European markets
for heroin and opium. But the cultivation of the poppy nose-dived
in Afghanistan when the conservative Taliban regime declared the
crop un-Islamic. To ensure the implementation of the religious decree,
members of the religious clergy were appointed in every district
to monitor poppy cultivation. Many farmers who tried to defy the
edict issued by Mullah Omar underwent severe punishment including
fines, lashings and imprisonment, and were only released once they
gave convincing assurances that they would never cultivate the crop
again.
As
a result of these drastic measures, the area under poppy cultivation
in Afghanistan decreased to 7,606 hectares in 2001 under the Taliban,
from 79,000 hectares in 1999. According to official figures, production
has now increased to a whopping 90, 583 hectares. The 2003 Global
Illicit Drug Trends Report, launched by the United Nations Office
on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Paris last month, reveals that as
heroin production goes down globally, a rapid increase in production
in Afghanistan has fuelled the international market. The UNODC report
states that a resumption in poppy farming after the fall of the
Taliban in November 2001 brought world market levels down to those
seen before major producers, such as Myanmar and Laos, cut production
drastically in 2001.
Similarly, the poppy
yield in Pakistani areas declined substantially due to serious measures
taken by local and international drug control agencies. In a bid
to eradicate poppy cultivation in Pakistan, the UNDCP provided huge
grants over the last few years for the development of poppy growing
areas to enable growers to switch over to other means of livelihood.
This included proposals for setting up small industrial units and
small loans to growers. These development projects in the poppy-growing
areas of Pakistan, according to official figures, resulted in a
significant drop of acreage from 32,577 hectares in 1978-79 to 1,554
hectares during 1995-96, and further, to 628 hectares in 1998-99.
Pakistan's outstanding performance in countering narcotics enabled
it to obtain full certification as non-poppy growing country in
the year 1999-2000.
However, besides continuing economic concerns, the change in the
poiltical climate in neighbouring Afghanistan played a major role
in bringing back poppy cultivation. Talking about the surge in the
poppy cultivation during the current year, officials of an international
drug monitoring body said that peasants in Afghanistan were encouraged
by the increase in lawlessness after the fall of the Taliban, which
deflected the Karzai government's attention to other priorities.
Its inability to control areas outside the capital of Kabul has
resulted in near anarchy.
"Everybody knows that Afghanistan is now ruled by various warlords
and there is no central authority there," says a representative
of an international NGO. He believes that in a situation where the
Karzai government is unable to monitor the distribution of humanitarian
aid to its poor, and international agencies have to pay extortion
money to warlords just to distribute this aid, the government cannot
stop people from cultivating the poppy crop.
Aid workers have revealed that in many areas of Afghanistan, warlords
have set up fake NGOs that ask international agencies to provide
them with food items for onward distribution. They then sell these
rations in the local markets. "The looting of caravans of many
of the agencies who refused to comply with these requests is a daily
norm," says an aid worker.
International NGOs engaged in anti-narcotics projects in Afghanistan
believe that Afghani peasants have been encouraged to resume poppy
cultivation by these warlords, who not only offer them advance funding,
but promise high profits for the yield, as well as assurances of
protection.
The monitors of the anti-narcotics organisations in Pakistan believe
that the tribesmen on the Pakistani side of the divide are not only
encouraged by the conditions in Afghanistan where poppy is being
cultivated openly, but are also motivated by religious edicts issued
in some agencies, including Bajaur Agency and Mohmand Agency, which
declared the crop 'Islamic.'
Local newspapers quote a religious decree issued in Bajaur Agency
by the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam's (Fazlur Rehman group) Salarzai area
president,Maulvi Fazal, who termed poppy cultivation 'Islamic.'
According to some reports, the political administration of Bajaur
Agency has since issued an arrest warrant for the maulvi. "This
verdict was given after religious scholars obtained financial rewards
from the international drug barons in the area, whose earnings suffered
because people were not growing the crop due to various reasons.
They knew it would encourage the unlettered people in these areas
to grow poppy without any hesitation," says an NGO worker.
Activists also cite growing anti-US and anti-western feelings in
these areas as contributing to the increase in land under poppy
cultivation. According to them, various religious leaders in the
tribal zones had called upon Muslims to use drugs as an 'atom bomb'
against the US and western interests. "When the western countries
are targeting the Muslim countries alone, why not take revenge by
growing poppy and smuggling it to their countries," one of
the leaders has been quoted to have said.
A record acreage of land has been brought under poppy cultivation
in Pakistan's Balochistan and NWFP this year, breaking the 1998
record of 950 hectares, the highest in the last four years. As a
result, the UN's drug monitoring body has voiced concern about the
resurgence in poppy cultivation in Pakistan, a country which had
successfully eradicated poppy cultivation years ago.
The crop is being cultivated in abundance in Tehsil Adenzi, Maskani
valley in Samar Bagh sub-division, Sultan Khel Dera, Turmang Valley,
Darwarra Valley, Dara Ushari and Dadwan valley in Dir sub-division.
Sources said poppy has also been cultivated in parts of Tehmargarah
and Dir districts. Other than this, sources reveal that the Khyber
Agency bordering Afghanistan has cultivated poppy on 868 hectares
of land, while the Khurram Agency has cultivated poppy on 812 hectares
of land. "At least a patch of three kilometres in Malakand
agency is under cultivation, while poppy in Tehmargarah and Dir
districts is cultivated, but it is mostly grown in mountainous tracks
not visible from the roadside," says a source.
Sources said the heroin manufacturing laboratories in Wari Town
and some areas of Bajaur Agencies, where the final yield of heroin
is processed, have re-started operations. "These areas are
located in no-man's land, and the heroin manufacturing laboratories
are small units set up inside houses which can hardly be detected,"
says an insider. Additionally, zenanas (women's quarters) are being
used for this purpose which, according to the tribal traditions
of Pathan society, are purely women's domains, which no man is allowed
to enter.
Sources also disclose that a few thousand hectares of land has come
under cultivation for the first time in Kila Abdullah and Gulistan
districts of Balochistan province. While law enforcement agencies
in Balochistan claim to have destroyed one third of the crop, officials
of the provincial government in NWFP have expressed their inability
to destroy the crop in these areas, calling them 'inaccessible terrain.'
According to some reports, the Frontier Constabulary faced tough
armed resistance in the tribal areas of Balochistan during the operation
to destroy the banned crop. "The areas in Balochistan where
poppy is cultivated are known as smuggling routes and are infiltrated
by criminal tribes as well as drug barons," says an official.
After the FC police jawans successfully destroyed the crop in some
villages in Qila Abdullah district in southern Balochistan, farmers
took to the streets in protest, arguing that opium cultivation was
their only means of livelihood. They also blocked roads leading
to Afghanistan for several hours. "No other crop can yield
enough revenue to pay the electricity bills," they argue, to
justify poppy cultivation.
One of these protestors said they had no crops for five years and
had lost fields and orchards because of drought, and their plight
was completely ignored by the government. "Presently we are
compelled to beg," said a protestor, who said that the long-standing
drought and soaring taxes have hit them hard.
However, the surge in the poppy crop is a particular cause of concern
for Pakistan, as the latest 'Drug Abuse in Pakistan' survey reveals
that more than 500,000 people are regular heroin users, making the
country one of the countries hardest hit by narcotics abuse. Experts
warn that the surge in poppy cultivation in Pakistan and neighbouring
Afghanistan means that the number of drug addicts in Pakistan will
increase manifold. "The formula is simple. When the deadly
drug is produced in abundance, the first transit country, Pakistan,
is going to be its primary market," says an official of the
anti-narcotic force.
The
diplomatic community has other concerns. They are worried that the
return of poppy culture will translate into big bucks for Afghan
warlords, who would then once again be able to finance their armies
with drug money. " If serious steps are not taken to immediately
halt the surge in poppy production, it will, in turn, hamper the
efforts of the world community presently engaged in restoring peace
in war-torn Afghanistan," asserts an Islamabad-based diplomat.
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