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Taliban Bans Poppy Production In Afghanistan

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Apr 4, 2022
  • 2 min read

Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban announced a ban Sunday on poppy production, even as farmers across the country began harvesting the bright red flower that produces the opium used to make heroin, Kathy Gannon and Mohammad Shoaib Amin reported for the Associated Press (AP).


Photo Insert: Afghanistan produces more opium than all opium-producing countries combined and last year was the sixth straight year of record opium harvests.



The order warns farmers that their crops will be burned and they can be jailed if they proceed with the harvest. The ban is reminiscent of the Taliban’s previous rule in the late 1990s when the religion-driven movement outlawed poppy production.


At that time, the ban was staggered and implemented countrywide within two years. The UN verified that production had been eradicated in most of the country.



However, after their ouster in 2001 farmers in many parts of the country reportedly plowed over their wheat fields — which had been almost impossible to bring to market because of the lack of roads and infrastructure — and returned to poppy production.


During the last years of the Taliban rule, wheat was rotting in fields because the farmers were unable to bring it to market to be sold and ground into flour. Poppies are the main source of income for millions of small farmers and day laborers who can earn upwards of $300 a month harvesting them and extracting the opium.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

Today, Afghanistan is the world’s largest producer of opium and in 2021, before the Taliban takeover, produced more than 6,000 tons of opium, which a report from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime said could potentially yield 320 tons of pure heroin.


Afghanistan produces more opium than all opium-producing countries combined and last year was the sixth straight year of record opium harvests.


Market & economy: Market economist in suit and tie reading reports and analysing charts in the office located in the financial district.

That’s the case even as the US and international community were spending billions of dollars to eradicate poppy production. The Taliban reportedly made millions of dollars by charging taxes on farmers and middlemen to move their drugs outside Afghanistan and senior officials of the US-backed government were implicated in the flourishing drug trade.


Washington spent more than $8 billion trying to eradicate poppy production in Afghanistan during its nearly 20-year war, which ended with the return of the Taliban in August. Nearly 80% of heroin produced from Afghan opium production reaches Europe through Central Asia and Pakistan.





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