Akmal Dawi
VOA News
January 3, 2024
Afghanistan’s Taliban government is touting major strides in combating drug production and trafficking over the past year.
Acting defense minister Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid announced at a Kabul press conference on Sunday that 4,472 tons of narcotics had been destroyed, 8,282 individuals involved in production and smuggling were arrested, and 13,904 hectares of poppy crops were cleared.
“Smuggling of all contraband has been prevented by 99 percent,” Mujahid claimed.
The United States and the United Nations have confirmed a massive reduction in poppy cultivation in Afghanistan since the Taliban supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, banned the crop in April 2022.
Afghanistan’s poppy cultivation plummeted so dramatically after the Taliban ban that the country no longer holds the title of top global opiate supplier, ceding it to Myanmar, according to a 2023 report by the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, or UNODC.
For nearly two decades, despite billions of dollars poured into counter-narcotics by Western donors, Afghanistan remained the world’s opium kingpin, supplying more than 80% of the world’s illicit market.
Opium is used to produce heroin, a highly addictive and dangerous drug.
Unsustainable initiative
Eradicating opium cultivation remains a monumental challenge for the Taliban, despite their declared commitment to a permanent, rigorously enforced ban and a drug-free Afghanistan.
Experts say extreme poverty in rural and agricultural communities haunts the Taliban’s vow, threatening to lure farmers back to poppy cultivation.
“Despite the apparent initial impact of the Taliban’s narcotics ban, farmers will likely again turn to poppy cultivation unless there is a plan to address the potential loss of over 400,000 livelihoods linked to opium cultivation,” an official at the U.S. Department of State wrote VOA in emailed comments.
The Taliban’s poppy cultivation ban has dealt a harsh blow to Afghanistan’s illicit narcotics economy, causing an estimated $1 billion loss for those involved, as reported by the U.N. and independent experts.
“In 2023, the farmers’ income from selling opium to traders declined by 92% from an estimated $1.36 billion in 2022 to $110 million in 2023,” the UNODC reported in November.
As the Taliban pursue their counter-narcotics goals, finding sustainable alternative livelihoods for affected communities will be crucial to prevent unbearable hardships and even potential conflicts.
“The economic consequences of the ban so far may have been somewhat muted by large existing inventories of opium from previous harvests, but smaller farmers, sharecroppers, and wage laborers suffer the most since they don’t have stocks of opium,” William Byrd, an expert at the U.S. Institute of Peace, told VOA.
The opium economy in Afghanistan has been a complex and controversial issue, annually pumping between $1.8 billion and $2.7 billion into the Afghan economy, accounting for 6% to 11% of GDP according to the U.N.
US aid
U.S. officials have long argued that the global narcotics trade serves as a shadowy financier, fueling terrorism, organized crime, and corruption across the globe.
From 2003 to 2021, while engaged in counter-insurgency operations against the Taliban in Afghanistan, the United States also invested upwards of $9 billion in programs aimed at curbing the illicit drug trade.
Following the Taliban takeover, the U.S. cut development aid to Afghanistan, focusing solely on U.N.-administered humanitarian assistance. Alternative livelihood programs for poppy farmers were among the casualties.
While official diplomatic relations remain on hold, U.S. officials have explored avenues for communication with the Taliban on issues like counter-narcotics through occasional, unofficial talks outside Afghanistan.
Sanctions imposed on Taliban leadership and entities currently prevent direct U.S. engagement in their counter-narcotics programs.
“Unfortunately, countries and organizations that have huge budgets and resources to prevent the cultivation and smuggling of poppy opiates do not help Afghans with alternative livelihoods,” said Mujahid, the Taliban defense minister whose father, Mullah Mohammad Omar, the founding Taliban leader, nearly eliminated poppy cultivation in 2000.
Omar’s poppy ban was disrupted by the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001.
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