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SWAZILAND: Tiny Swaziland losing war to weed out marijuana

Rebecca Harrison

Reuters

Monday 13 Jun 2005

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PIGG'S PEAK, Swaziland (Reuters) - After hours of scrambling over rugged
mountain terrain, Swaziland's anti-drug squad finally find what they're
looking for: a secret field packed with some of the world's strongest
marijuana.

Prized for its potency across the world, 'Swazi Gold' is grown in the
remote northern mountains of this tiny African kingdom, then smuggled into
neighboring South Africa and on to Europe and North America.

Police in impoverished Swaziland say that despite dousing acres of towering
plants with deadly insecticide, they are losing the war on marijuana to
dirt-poor peasants bent on protecting their most lucrative crop.

"We can't win this war," said Ngwane Dlamini, head of criminal
investigation in the northern region of Hhohho.

"This is just a drop in the ocean -- the people are poor and they can get
much more money for marijuana than maize or vegetables," he said as he
sniffed at a six-foot plant in one makeshift field north of the regional
capital Pigg's Peak.

A handful of drug lords buy and sell Swaziland's marijuana -- the world's
most popular illegal drug -- but most of the growing is done by subsistence
farmers desperate for cash after four years of drought and hefty job cuts.

According to Swaziland's Council Against Drug and Alcohol Abuse, some 70
percent of small farmers in the Hhohho region, where mountainous terrain
makes growing maize tough, turn to marijuana -- or dagga as it is locally
known.

The world's top law enforcement agency, Interpol, says Southern Africa,
including Swaziland, has the potential to overtake key marijuana producers
like Morocco and already sends major shipments to the west.

SURVIVAL

Like thousands of other peasant farmers in Hhohho, a woman who identifies
herself only as Khanyesile ekes out a living from 30 limp marijuana plants
hidden in thick undergrowth behind her rickety shack.

"My husband died and I lost my job at the local furniture factory -- I
needed money to feed my five children and send them to school," she says
from beneath a flowered headscarf.

Khanyesile, 45, has been jailed and fined for her dagga. Police have twice
sprayed and burned her tiny fields and once local thieves stole the entire
crop just before harvesting.

But a patchy income from selling shiny stones to tourists at the side of
the road is not enough to feed her family, and she has no intention of
giving up her plants despite the threat of up to six years in prison.

"You can't get money for maize ... and it is difficult to grow, but a man
from South Africa comes every month to buy my dagga," she tells Reuters.

Khanyesile says most of her neighbors also grow marijuana and homesteads
club together to minimize risk for the man from South Africa, who arrives
on foot across the mountains.

"I don't understand why the police want to stop us growing dagga -- it is
the only way we can make money."

CROCODILE-INFESTED RIVERS

Police say that although peasants like Khanyesile are harmless enough, some
of the bigger growers are swapping dagga for illegal firearms from South
Africa and Mozambique, prompting a rise in gun crime in this sleepy nation.

Armed with a couple of assault rifles and several gallons of insecticide,
Dlamini's anti-drug squad scours the region daily for dagga plantations in
a bid to contain the industry.

"Look, they've left traces," shouts Dlamini to his colleagues as they tramp
through the forest, holding up the distinctive 5-speared leaf of a
marijuana plant.

But he knows that even if they find the field, this country the size of New
Jersey is teeming with thousands more.

The bigger growers penetrate the country's furthest-flung valleys, hiking
deep into the forests across crocodile-infested rivers to avoid police.

"It is everywhere. At every stream or river the banks are full of dagga,"
said Hoare, decked out in waterproof overalls with a spray gun in his hand.

Swazi marijuana, which is said to be more potent due to the soil and
weather conditions, fetches a handsome premium.

On the streets of Johannesburg, 'Swazi Gold' is sold in 30 gram (1 ounce)
bank bags, or 'bankies', for 70 rand ($11) apiece, while Amsterdam coffee
shops -- where smoking marijuana is legal -- charge around 6 euros ($7.5)
for one gram.

Khanyesile says she gets around 1,000 rand ($154) for 2 kilograms (4.4 pounds).

Police have seized 285 kilograms of marijuana so far this year and
destroyed roughly 500 acres -- a fraction of the total, said Albert
Mkhatshwa, head of the national drugs unit.

Small-fry dealers smuggle out their stash on foot while the big guys find
myriad ways to sneak their goods past customs. Police recently stopped a
giant wooden fish headed for Italy packed with at least 30 kilograms of
compressed weed.

But many experts say police are wasting their time, since marijuana is
embedded in Swazi culture, smoked for centuries by farmers and used for
medicine by traditional healers.

Even Inspector Dlamini says the chief of his home village would smoke a
dagga pipe twice a day as an accepted part of Swazi tradition.

And some local health workers argue marijuana could help in the fight
against HIV/AIDS, which affects around 40 percent of the adult population.

"In terms of HIV, sometimes it can boost the immune system," said
Madzabudzabu Kunene, who coordinates the Swaziland AIDS Support
Organization in Hhohho. "It can help in boosting appetite, that is proven."

(Additional reporting by Hannington Osodo)



 

 

 

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