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Thread: U.S. helping Afghan farmers give up opium for wheat

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    Default U.S. helping Afghan farmers give up opium for wheat

    LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan -- Toiling in what once was the opium capital of the world, farmers in southern Afghanistan are swapping out their poppy plants for wheat crops.


    The farmers are participating in programs sponsored by the U.S. Agency for International Development, which is offering seeds, fertilizers and improved irrigation to the region in an effort to stop poppy crops and, ultimately, the production of opium and heroin.

    Observers have noticed a significant decline in the opium trade in Afghanistan, with the number of poppy-free provinces increasing from 13 in 2007 to 18 in 2008, according to a U.N. report released last year.

    Opium cultivation in the country, which has 34 provinces, dropped by about 20 percent in a year, the U.N. reported in August.

    "It's a challenge to deliver assistance in a war zone -- you can hear fighter jets flying above us right now," said Rory Donohoe, a USAID development officer.

    "At the end of the day, what we found is successful is that we work in areas that we can work," he told CNN in a recent interview in Helmand province.

    "We come to places like this demonstration farm where Afghans can come here to a safe environment, get training, pick up seeds and fertilizer, then go back to districts of their own."

    Many of Afghanistan's northern and eastern provinces have already benefited from USAID alternative farming programs, which have doled out more than $22 million to nearly 210,000 Afghans to build or repair 435 miles (700 kilometers) of roads and some 2,050 miles (3,300 kilometers) of irrigation and drainage canals.

    Giving Afghan farmers improved access to markets and improved irrigation is successfully weaning them away from poppy production, according to officials at USAID.

    Over the years, opium and heroin -- both derivatives of the poppy -- have served as a major source of revenue for the Taliban, the insurgent Sunni movement that once ruled Afghanistan.

    "If you can just help the people of Afghanistan in this way, the fighting will go away," said Abdul Qadir, a farmer in Lashkar Gah.

    "The Taliban and other enemies of the country will also disappear."

    http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapc...rms/index.html

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    they are 'asking' them to switch from opium to wheat.

    I wonder if farmers in there own country would be asked so nicely.
    un-compromising Straight Edge

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    Farmers in the US aren't allowed to grow opium, though I'm not aware of what region would be suitable. US farmers are not allowed to grow hemp. Industrial hemp is not the kind that is smoke for "recreation" but it is hard to tell the difference & I guess the DNA doesn't want potheads to be defrauded.

    The US also tries to discourage the growing of coca leaves in South America.

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    One thing the US is good at is large scale agriculture. It would help our trade imbalance a lot if we allowed domestic production of these plants, in addition to removing the main source of income for terrorist producers and criminal street gang distributors.

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    Quote Originally Posted by SwordoftheVistula View Post
    One thing the US is good at is large scale agriculture. It would help our trade imbalance a lot if we allowed domestic production of these plants, in addition to removing the main source of income for terrorist producers and criminal street gang distributors.
    The US is also good at "persuading" other countries to do things that we personally want them to do, as opposed to them just figuring out things for themselves.

    World police for the win.....

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