PRESS RELEASE
EMBARGOED UNTIL 0830 GMT/1030 CET TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 12
BRUSSELS, 12 September (UNODC) - The head of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Antonio Maria Costa, called on Tuesday for robust military action by NATO forces to destroy the opium industry in southern Afghanistan.
Presenting details of the 2006 UNODC Annual Opium Survey at a news conference in Brussels, he noted that the dramatic surge in opium cultivation and production had occurred mainly in the increasingly lawless southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar.
"In the turbulent southern region , counter-insurgency and counter-narcotics efforts must reinforce each other so as to stop the vicious circle of drugs funding terrorists and terrorists protecting drug traffickers," the UN drugs chief said.
"I call on NATO forces to destroy the heroin labs, disband the open opium bazaars, attack the opium convoys and bring to justice the big traders. Therefore I invite coalition countries to give NATO the mandate and resources required."
Opium cultivation throughout Afghanistan surged 59% to 165,000 hectares in 2006. The opium harvest was an unprecedented 6,100 tonnes, an increase of 49 percent from 2005, making Afghanistan virtually sole supplier to the world.
Only six of the country's 34 provinces are opium-free. Cultivation fell in eight provinces, mainly in the more stable north. Around the country, the number of people involved in opium cultivation increased by almost a third to 2.9 million, representing 12.6% of the total population.
"Revenue from the harvest will be over three billion dollars this year, making a handful of criminals and corrupt officials extremely rich" Mr Costa said. "This money is also dragging the rest of Afghanistan into a bottomless pit of destruction and despair."
The UNODC Executive Director warned drug-consuming nations that the Afghan opium boom was likely to fuel a surge in the number of lethal drug overdoses in consuming nations when the new heroin starts reaching users in 2007.
"Experience shows that massive over-supply of heroin does not lead to lower prices but to higher-purity heroin doses. That means more deaths from overdoses," he said. "I fear that in 2007, once the new crop has reached the retail markets, Afghan opium will kill more than the 100,000 people of the recent past."
Concerted action was needed in response to the alarming increase in opium production.
This should include:
The UNODC Executive Director said the superficially enticing proposal to turn illicit opium into morphine for medical purposes was no panacea. It would take at least a generation before Afhanistan would be able to guarantee the security of the morphine trade, there was no global shortage of medical morphine and the price of illicit opium was five times that of medical opium.
"There is no magic formula to save Afghanistan," he said. "Instead, we need to insist on full implementation of the Afghan national drug control strategy, which is based on development, security, law enforcement and good governance."
Richard Murphy
UNODC Spokesman
Tel +43 1 26060 576 Mobile +43 699 1459 5761 richard.murphy@unodc.org