News (Media Awareness Project) - Afghanistan: Taliban Calls For International Help In |
Title: | Afghanistan: Taliban Calls For International Help In |
Published On: | 2001-06-28 |
Source: | Times of Central Asia (Kyrgyzstan) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 15:39:52 |
TALIBAN CALLS FOR INTERNATIONAL HELP IN ANTI-DRUGS DRIVE
KABUL - Afghanistan's ruling Taliban militia on Tuesday called on the U.N.
and the international community to help compensate farmers who had given up
poppy cultivation in a drive to eradicate opium from the world's largest
producer.
"Afghanistan has shown its sincerity and resolve in helping the drive
against drugs by banning poppy cultivation, destroying processing equipment
for opium and stopped drug trafficking," the Taliban government said in a
statement to mark the International Day against Drug Abuse.
"The eradication of drugs cannot be the work of one country. It needs the
cooperation of all regional countries and especially international
organizations," said the statement addressed to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan.
It called on Annan to help provide financial assistance within the
framework of U.N. resolutions to help compensate farmers,
With a religious decree and some serious resolve, the Taliban has virtually
eradicated opium-producing poppy flowers in less than a year, but at great
cost to tens of thousands of farmers who have been stripped of a livelihood
in a nation already wracked by civil war and the worst drought in three
decades.
Since the Taliban outlawed poppy cultivation last July, calling it a
violation of Islam, programs for planting alternative crops have failed.
The lack of foreign help for desperate former poppy farmers has strained
relations between the Taliban and the international aid community.
When U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell announced a $43 million
humanitarian aid package for Afghanistan last month, he mentioned the
plight of the poppy farmers and called the poppy ban "a decision by the
Taliban that we welcome."
More than three-quarters of the world's opium was produced in Afghanistan
only a year ago, when the country exported nearly 4,000 tons - more than
all the other poppy-producing nations combined.
KABUL - Afghanistan's ruling Taliban militia on Tuesday called on the U.N.
and the international community to help compensate farmers who had given up
poppy cultivation in a drive to eradicate opium from the world's largest
producer.
"Afghanistan has shown its sincerity and resolve in helping the drive
against drugs by banning poppy cultivation, destroying processing equipment
for opium and stopped drug trafficking," the Taliban government said in a
statement to mark the International Day against Drug Abuse.
"The eradication of drugs cannot be the work of one country. It needs the
cooperation of all regional countries and especially international
organizations," said the statement addressed to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan.
It called on Annan to help provide financial assistance within the
framework of U.N. resolutions to help compensate farmers,
With a religious decree and some serious resolve, the Taliban has virtually
eradicated opium-producing poppy flowers in less than a year, but at great
cost to tens of thousands of farmers who have been stripped of a livelihood
in a nation already wracked by civil war and the worst drought in three
decades.
Since the Taliban outlawed poppy cultivation last July, calling it a
violation of Islam, programs for planting alternative crops have failed.
The lack of foreign help for desperate former poppy farmers has strained
relations between the Taliban and the international aid community.
When U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell announced a $43 million
humanitarian aid package for Afghanistan last month, he mentioned the
plight of the poppy farmers and called the poppy ban "a decision by the
Taliban that we welcome."
More than three-quarters of the world's opium was produced in Afghanistan
only a year ago, when the country exported nearly 4,000 tons - more than
all the other poppy-producing nations combined.
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