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Morocco: Morocco anti-cannabis drive draws praise, rebukes

Zakia Abdennebi

Ely Times and County

Monday 13 Mar 2006

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AL KOULLA, Morocco - Morocco‘s drive to stamp out cannabis cultivation
has won praise abroad, but farmers in the world‘s top hashish producer
say they face destitution without more help to find alternative incomes.

The dark green, fern-like plant has spread across the mountainous Rif
region in Morocco‘s Northeast as hashish smoking went from marginal to
almost mainstream among young Europeans.

The government‘s crackdown on the cannabis industry -- estimated to be
worth $12 billion -- was given a shot in the arm by suspicions that
hashish was used to partly pay for dynamite that blew up trains in
Madrid in 2004, killing 191 people.

Islamist militants claimed the Madrid attacks in the name of al Qaeda,
and Moroccans were implicated in the bombings.

The government of the North African kingdom says it aims to erase
cannabis production by 2008 and, in a sign its policy is starting to
bite, the area cultivated shrank by 10 percent in 2004, according to the
International Narcotics Control Board.

But in the Rif, where two-thirds of farmers grow cannabis, people say
more should be done to help them develop new sources of income.

Last week, around 3,000 men, women and children held a protest march
near the village of Boujdiane. "Yes to fight hashish, no to starvation,"
some shouted. "Where are the jobs? Where are the promises?"

Abdelillah Bakhoyti, whose cannabis plants in Al Koulla were cut down in
July, says his community has been let down.

"We agreed to stop growing cannabis in exchange for a development
project but for now they have given us nothing."

Known locally as "Kif" or "green gold," cannabis grows well in the Rif‘s
wild and isolated terrain, and its leaves and flowers are easily
transformed into the resin sold on street corners from Amsterdam to
Marseille.

In Al Koulla and other villages, people live in homes built of mud and
travel by donkey along bone-shaking roads. Many houses are without
electricity, running water or toilets and food supplies are often
threatened by drought.

Decades of legislation and international conventions failed to stop
cannabis cultivation spreading as locals switched out of less lucrative
crops in an attempt to earn hard cash.

History has also played a part. The region, which lies about 125 miles
northeast of the capital Rabat, is struggling to emerge from decades of
isolation under former King Hassan.

In 1959, the then-crown prince led the army to crush an uprising in Rif
by people angered over their exclusion from the first independent
Moroccan government.

"In the ‘60s, cannabis was only grown in the highest, difficult-to-reach
mountains, especially in the east and middle of the Rif," said farmer
Ahmed Alharrak. "When farmers elsewhere started having problems, they
started growing it too."

The government is focusing its efforts on the province of Larache, which
accounted for 6 percent of cannabis cultivation in 2003, or 29,600
acres. So far, 9,900 acres have been destroyed, according to officials.

"We try to convince farmers to tend goats and to plant fruit trees,
especially olives, and create cooperative societies to produce dairy
products and poultry," said Mohamed Yemlahi, who coordinates an
anti-poverty program launched last year.

He said Larache had received almost 18 million dirhams ($1.98 million)
from the government, including 1.5 million to fight cannabis production
and create alternative activities.

The government has also launched a multibillion dollar development and
expansion program around the port of Tangier -- part of its attempts to
revive the region‘s economy.

CLAMPDOWN

Efforts by King Mohammed since his accession in 1999 to halt the drug
trade in the Rif have led to some spectacular arrests -- in 2003, 12
people, including judges and police officers, were jailed for links to
one of the most dangerous drug gangs.

But for dealers, getting the drugs out is relatively easy.

Morocco‘s cannabis fields border the Mediterranean, whose busy waters
offer a safe and easy route to Europe. Controls at ports and land
borders have failed to staunch the flow.

In its 2005 report, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime said
cannabis was the most commonly consumed street drug in the world, with
an estimated 161 million people using it in 2003, equivalent to 4
percent of the global population.

Efforts to halt the trade have been hampered by the global shift toward
thwarting terrorism. Customs authorities were already operating on
stretched budgets before intelligence resources were shifted toward
terrorism after September 11.

"The first generation of equipment to verify the contents of containers
can only detect one thing at a time," said Paris-based criminologist
Xavier Raufer. "After 9-11, they disconnected drugs and connected
explosives."

Narcotics experts say the best way to clamp down is at the source. But
the Rif example shows the difficulties of weaning people off a plant
that has come to dominate the entire economy.

"If the state wants to eradicate cannabis, it must help farmers by
building roads here and giving them interest-free loans," said farmer
Ahmed Harrak. "And they should do away with prosecuting cannabis farmers."

 

 

 

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