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Old 03-09-2003, 12:45 AM
hudini36 hudini36 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2003
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Default Afghanistan displaces Myanmar as top heroin producer:

I wonder who's moving that stuff in a country run by US
Special forces?

Afghanistan displaces Myanmar as top heroin producer: US
Saturday, 01-Mar-2003 11:20AM PST

Story from AFP
Copyright 2003 by Agence France-Presse (via ClariNet)
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WASHINGTON, March 1 (AFP) - Afghanistan has toppled Myanmar as the world's top source of illicit opium, but the southeast Asian state is streaking ahead as the region's prime producer of amphetamines, the United States said Saturday.
In a major drugs strategy report, Washington backed up figures released by the United Nations last week showing an increase in poppy cultivation since the ouster of Afghanistan's former Taliban rulers.

" The size of the opium harvest in 2002 makes Afghanistan the world's leading opium producer, the report said.

" Trafficking of Afghan opium and heroin refined in numerous laboratories inside Afghanistan creates serious problems for Afghanistan and its neighbors."
The International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, collated by the State Department from US posts abroad, said that the area under opium cultivation in the country last year reached 30,750 hectares (76,000 acres).

The figure rose from a low of 1,685 hectares (4,160 acres) in 2001 after the fundamentalist Taliban, later ousted by a US-led war, banned opium production.
The report nevertheless credited US-backed President Hamid Karzai, who was in Washington this week, with taking a number of important early steps in a British-sponsored effort to cut drug production.

The drive has been complicated by political upheaval and uncertain security conditions.

Although the report found that Myanmar was still a major source of opium, it concluded that production had declined for the sixth staight year to 630 metric tonnes in 2002 down 26 percent from a year earlier.

It called on the military regime in Yangon, which earns frequent criticism here for its human rights record, to carry on the fight against narcotics -- which it said had yielded "measurable results."
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