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Opium fields spread across Iraq as farmers try to make ends
meet
By Patrick Cockburn
Published: 17 January 2008
© 2008 Independent News and Media Limited

The cultivation of opium poppies whose product is turned into
heroin is spreading rapidly across Iraq as farmers find they
can no longer make a living through growing traditional crops.
Afghan with experience in planting poppies have been helping
farmers switch to producing opium in fertile parts of Diyala
province, once famous for its oranges and pomegranates, north-
east of Baghdad.
At a heavily guarded farm near the town of Buhriz, south
of the provincial capital Baquba, poppies are grown between
the orange trees in order to hide them, according to a local
source.
The shift by Iraqi farmers to producing opium was first revealed
by The Independent last May and is a very recent development.
The first poppy fields, funded by drug smugglers who previously
supplied Saudi Arabia and the Gulf with heroin from Afghanistan,
were close to the city of Diwaniyah in southern Iraq. The
growing of poppies has now spread to Diyala, which is one
of the places in Iraq where al-Qa'ida is still resisting US
and Iraqi government forces. It is also deeply divided between
Sunni, Shia and Kurd and the extreme violence means that local
security men have little time to deal with the drugs trade.
The speed with which farmers are turning to poppies is confirmed
by the Iraqi news agency al-Malaf Press, which says that opium
is now being produced around the towns of Khalis, Sa'adiya,
Dain'ya and south of Baladruz, pointing out that these are
all areas where al-Qa'ida is strong.
The agency cites a local agricultural engineer identified
as M S al-Azawi as saying that local farmers got no support
from the government and could not compete with cheap imports
of fruit and vegetables. The price of fertiliser and fuel
has also risen sharply. Mr Azawi says: "The cultivation
of opium is the likely solution [to these problems]."
Al-Qa'ida is in control of many of the newly established
opium farms and has sometimes taken the land of farmers it
has killed, said a local source. At Buhriz, American military
forces destroyed the opium farm and drove off al-Qa'ida last
year but it later returned. "No one can get inside the
farm because it is heavily guarded," said the source,
adding that the area devoted to opium in Diyala is still smaller
than that in southern Iraq around Amara and Majar al-Kabir.
After being harvested, the opium from Diyala is taken to
Ramadi in western Iraq. There are still no reports of heroin
laboratories being established in Iraq, unlike in Afghanistan.
Iraq has not been a major consumer of drugs but heroin from
Afghanistan has been transited from Iran and then taken to
Basra from where it is exported to the rich markets of Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait and the Gulf. Under Saddam Hussein, state security
in Basra was widely believed to control local drug smuggling
through the city.
The growing and smuggling of opium will be difficult to stop
in Iraq because much of the country is controlled by criminalised
militias. American successes in Iraq over the past year have
been largely through encouraging the development of a 70,000-strong
Sunni Arab militia, many of whose members are former insurgents
linked to protection rackets, kidnapping and crime. Muqtada
al-Sadr, the leader of the powerful Shia militia, the Mehdi
Army, says that criminals have infiltrated its ranks.
The move of local warlords, both Sunni and Shia, into opium
farming is a menacing development in Iraq, where local political
leaders are often allied to gangsters. The theft of fuel,
smuggling and control of government facilities such as ports
means that gangs are often very rich. It is they, rather than
impoverished farmers, who have taken the lead in financing
and organising opium production in Iraq.
Initial planting in fertile land west and south of Diwaniya
around the towns of Ash Shamiyah, al-Ghammas and Shinafiyah
were said to have faced problems because of the extreme heat
and humidity. Al-Malaf Press says that it has learnt that
the experiments with opium poppy-growing in Diyala have been
successful.
Although opium has not been grown in many of these areas
in Iraq in recent history, some of the earliest written references
to opium come from ancient Iraq. It was known to the ancient
Sumerians as early as 3400BC as the "Hul Gil" or
"joy plant" and there are mentions of it on clay
tablets found in excavations at the city of Nippur just east
of Diwaniyah.
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article3345186.ece
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