RPT-FEATURE-Pushing alternative crops in Afghan opium fight
(Repeats story that moved at 0000 GMT)
By Katrina Manson
NAD ALI, Afghanistan, Nov 27 (Reuters) - From the helicopter, you can see the empty fields of southern Afghanistan's Helmand River valley. Now comes the question: when the fields are lush again in spring, will farmers be growing opium poppy or wheat?
"This year we want to reach a minimum reduction of at least 50 percent," said Gulab Mangal, Governor of Helmand, Afghanistan's main opium-growing province and the most violent front in the Afghan war.
"There is a very strong link between opium growing and the Taliban -- the drug dealers are helping Taliban by buying weapons and ammunition for them."
Once known as the bread basket of Afghanistan, the lush green irrigated fields of Helmand are the world's single largest source of opium.
The United States sent 10,000 Marines to the province this year, joining a similar-sized British force. They simultaneously launched the two biggest military offensives of the 8-year-old war, aiming to drive out Taliban fighters from the opium lands.
Meanwhile, the Westerners and the Afghan government are trying to persuade farmers to switch to other crops.
"They send us help and their sons to sacrifice their lives and we send them opium. We should be grateful and use their resources better," said Mangal of the Western aid.
The economics of the opium trade have helped efforts to fight it this year. Partly because of past failures to combat it, there is now a global glut of opium, which has sent its price falling.
According to the United Nations, a hectare planted with opium in Afghanistan produced just three times as much cash value as the same land planted with wheat this year, compared to 27 times as much value a few years ago. British experts say any economic advantage of producing opium may have been eliminated altogether.
In what Western governments describe as a major success, farmers cultivated poppy on a third less land in Helmand this year than in 2008, according to the United Nations.
Nevertheless, Helmand's farmers achieved record yields where the drug was planted, still managing to produce more than half of the world's illegal opium in the province.
As part of an effort to reduce Taliban influence and funding, Mangal and his U.S. and British backers hope farmers will plant wheat instead. Britain is spending $15 million to provide wheat seed to nearly 70,000 farmers last year and this year.
Most farmers have to make do with 24th-generation wheat seed available on the local market, which has poor yields and little pest resistance. The new scheme will provide farmers with first-generation seed at a fraction of the market rate, plus fertiliser and technical assistance.
Trucking the wheat out to eight of Helmand's 13 districts is no mean feat. Several of the brightly painted lorries loaded high with seed sacks and escorted in convoys have been ambushed, hit by bombs, crashed on the tough roads or disappeared without trace. Some areas are still waiting for their wheat to arrive.
THE KILLING WILL STOP
The British military call Mangal a "bullet-magnet" for the risks he takes when going out to hold meetings in rural districts. During a meeting with elders in Sangin in the north of the province, insurgents shelled the gathering for 90 minutes.
Sporting Prada sunglasses and a suit jacket over his flowing clothes, the governor wandered through the centre of Nad Ali district west of the provincial capital Lashkar Gah.
Despite regular rocket attacks, the town has come to life in recent months, a sign of security improvements since July's simultaneous U.S. operation Strike of the Sword and British Operation Panther's Claw to the north and south.
Last year the main shopping street -- a few dusty strips -- was empty. Now about 300 stalls ply their wares in the bazaar. Shoes dangle from wooden struts, outsize weighing scales stand waiting for produce, and spare parts and mobile phone credit sellers lazily drink green tea together on wheeled-wooden carts.
In a half-built police station, Mangal implored elders to give up opium as a way of ensuring violence does not return.
"Almost one-and-a-half years ago this village was under control of the Taliban," he told hundreds of bearded men who sat barefoot on red rugs. "With the end of the opium, the corruption, the killing, the insurgency -- everything will stop."
The Nad Ali farmers listen mostly in silence.
"The Taliban force us to grow poppy, so if there are any Taliban in the area then nobody dares to grow wheat," said a farmer, who did not want to be named. "I know poppy is really bad but we don't have enough power to grow wheat crops on our own. If we get any help from the government then we will grow wheat."
(Editing by Peter Graff and Megan Goldin)
(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)
((E-mail: peter.graff@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: peter.graff.reuters.com@reuters.net; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 284))
(If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)
- Tweet this
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Reprints



Follow Reuters