News (Media Awareness Project) - US: DEA Says Afghanistan's Heroin Begets Violence |
Title: | US: DEA Says Afghanistan's Heroin Begets Violence |
Published On: | 2006-06-29 |
Source: | Washington Times (DC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 01:22:03 |
DEA SAYS AFGHANISTAN'S HEROIN BEGETS VIOLENCE
The head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration yesterday told a
House committee that Afghanistan's stability "rises and falls with
the drug trade," and its production of 92 percent of the world's
heroin supply has driven ongoing violence and lawlessness. But DEA
Administrator Karen P. Tandy said her agency is making "great
progress" in targeting the drug warlords and the Afghan criminal
organizations who control the heroin supply. "Thechallenges we face
fighting the drug trade in Afghanistan are tough, with conducting
law-enforcement operations in a war zone often controlled by powerful
heroin warlords in a country where the drug trade and culture is
deeply entrenched with an undeveloped infrastructure and fledgling
Afghan law-enforcement organizations," Mrs. Tandy told the House
Armed Services Committee. "But these challenges are not
insurmountable," she said. "In the past year alone, we've made great progress.
Afghanistan has promulgated new narcotics laws. They have conducted
their first arrest and search warrants under those laws. They have
ordered the first extradition of a major drug trafficker connected to
the Taliban." Mrs. Tandy said a newly created central tribunal court
and recently appointed prosecutors, which the country did not have
under the Taliban, successfully have prosecuted more than 100 drug
traffickers, including Misri Khan, the longtime head of a major
Afghan heroin ring and two of his key lieutenants who were convicted
and each sentenced to 17 years in prison. Over the past six months,
the DEA's Foreign-deployed Advisory and Support Teams, or FAST teams,
have seized more than 38 tons of opium -- a 700 percent increase over
the prior six months, she said. Earlier this month, the DEA received
$9.2 million to combat Afghan drug warlords as part of the $94.5
billion House-passed emergency spending bill for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. The money will allow the agency to continue to disrupt
drug operations in Afghanistan, especially those that use the drug
trade to finance terrorist organizations and attacks on coalition
forces. Despite the ongoing conflict in that country, Afghanistan has
emerged as the world's largest producer of opium and its refined form, heroin.
Last year, Afghanistan's opium output was about 5,000 tons, and the
DEA has called opium production in that country a significant threat
to its future and the region's stability. Mrs. Tandy said the Afghan
drug trade has the capability of financing terrorists and those who
support them, noting that the Taliban's association with the opium-
and heroin-smuggling trade continues today.
She said the Taliban continues to use the proceeds from the sale of
drugs, which it taxes and protects, as a source of revenue for the
anti-coalition activities. "We are strengthening Afghanistan's
institutions of justice and policing capabilities, and we are helping
to protect the U.S. and coalition troops from deadly attacks that are
funded in part by drug traffickers," she said.
The head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration yesterday told a
House committee that Afghanistan's stability "rises and falls with
the drug trade," and its production of 92 percent of the world's
heroin supply has driven ongoing violence and lawlessness. But DEA
Administrator Karen P. Tandy said her agency is making "great
progress" in targeting the drug warlords and the Afghan criminal
organizations who control the heroin supply. "Thechallenges we face
fighting the drug trade in Afghanistan are tough, with conducting
law-enforcement operations in a war zone often controlled by powerful
heroin warlords in a country where the drug trade and culture is
deeply entrenched with an undeveloped infrastructure and fledgling
Afghan law-enforcement organizations," Mrs. Tandy told the House
Armed Services Committee. "But these challenges are not
insurmountable," she said. "In the past year alone, we've made great progress.
Afghanistan has promulgated new narcotics laws. They have conducted
their first arrest and search warrants under those laws. They have
ordered the first extradition of a major drug trafficker connected to
the Taliban." Mrs. Tandy said a newly created central tribunal court
and recently appointed prosecutors, which the country did not have
under the Taliban, successfully have prosecuted more than 100 drug
traffickers, including Misri Khan, the longtime head of a major
Afghan heroin ring and two of his key lieutenants who were convicted
and each sentenced to 17 years in prison. Over the past six months,
the DEA's Foreign-deployed Advisory and Support Teams, or FAST teams,
have seized more than 38 tons of opium -- a 700 percent increase over
the prior six months, she said. Earlier this month, the DEA received
$9.2 million to combat Afghan drug warlords as part of the $94.5
billion House-passed emergency spending bill for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. The money will allow the agency to continue to disrupt
drug operations in Afghanistan, especially those that use the drug
trade to finance terrorist organizations and attacks on coalition
forces. Despite the ongoing conflict in that country, Afghanistan has
emerged as the world's largest producer of opium and its refined form, heroin.
Last year, Afghanistan's opium output was about 5,000 tons, and the
DEA has called opium production in that country a significant threat
to its future and the region's stability. Mrs. Tandy said the Afghan
drug trade has the capability of financing terrorists and those who
support them, noting that the Taliban's association with the opium-
and heroin-smuggling trade continues today.
She said the Taliban continues to use the proceeds from the sale of
drugs, which it taxes and protects, as a source of revenue for the
anti-coalition activities. "We are strengthening Afghanistan's
institutions of justice and policing capabilities, and we are helping
to protect the U.S. and coalition troops from deadly attacks that are
funded in part by drug traffickers," she said.
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