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Morocco's war on cannabis

BBC News

Friday 09 Mar 2007

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Morocco has dramatically reduced its production of cannabis.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) says the north
African country, which was the biggest supplier of hashish in the world,
has now cut production of the crop by almost 50% over the past three years.

The Moroccan government says it plans to completely eradicate cannabis
by 2008.

We drove into Morocco's cannabis country: the Rif mountains, where they
have been growing cannabis, or "Kif" as it is called, since the 15th
Century.

The landscape is imposing - craggy peaks and ridges look down onto
luminous green valleys.

'Well adapted'

I was travelling with Alessandro Boccoli, an agricultural advisor to the
provincial government.

I asked him how difficult it was to police this area.

"Yes of course access is very difficult, not only for the police, for
everybody, you have to know all the routes," he said.

"The cannabis plant is well adapted to the environment here, to the
climate, the conditions and even to the agricultural ways of the people."

We came to a ridge where there were some scattered fields and where the
odd cannabis plant was poking out through the rocks.

Here men were pruning olive trees, which are being grown as an
alternative to the cannabis crop.

Clamping down

Local farmer Mohamed Garrouj is keen to try it because he's already
suffered the consequences of growing the illegal crop: "I used to grow
cannabis but I was put in jail because of it, for eight months.

"Now that's all over, I don't grow it anymore. It's not just me, whole
villages have been put in jail for it!"

As well as more stringent policing, the authorities have improved their
security measures along the coast. For example they have installed the
latest hi-tech scanners at the ports.

It is thought that the urgency with which they are now acting stems from
international pressure to address the drug problem.

Some intelligence experts believe the militant group which bombed trains
in Madrid in 2004 was largely funded by cannabis trafficking.

Khalid Zerouali from the Moroccan Interior Ministry says it has not been
easy clamping down on cannabis production.

"It's very difficult exercise, but what we do is we eradicate. We
destroy the crop in the field, involving with us, the civil society, the
local population, and we try to give them help, so they can immediately
start growing something else," he told me.

'Very worried'

Walking in another even more remote part of the Rif mountains, I could
see some fields where the seeds of cannabis were being sown.

Despite the government crackdown, it was quite easy to find people who
admitted growing cannabis.

"The gendarmerie come here and tell us not to grow cannabis, but how can
we live?" asked Mohammed, another local farmer.

"Ever since we started growing cannabis we have been afraid, but what
can we do, we're just trying to earn a living, for us and for our children.

"If the government catch us with just a little bit they arrest us. We
are very worried."

The UNODC says the biggest challenge is finding other ways farmers like
Mohammed can survive.

"There have been lots of past attempts to find alternative crops, but
they haven't always worked, because cannabis is a crop that commands
such an inflated price," explained Abdeslam Dahmane from development
agency Targa which works closely with the UNODC.

"There have been attempts at introducing apples, vines and things like
that but they haven't really addressed the problem.

"It's not a question of replacing cannabis with apples, vines or
avocados. The question is replacing the incredibly dynamic economy of
cannabis, with an equally dynamic economy - that is also legal."

Hippy haunt

Chefchaouen lies in the heart of the Rif mountains.

Hashish is easy to come by in the hippy haunt of Chefchaouen

In the medina, people sell all sorts of vegetables and fruits amid the
narrow cobbled alleyways of whitewashed walls and blue doors.

Chefchaouen has been a favourite haunt of hippy travellers and
backpackers for years, as hashish is easier to buy here than in much of
Europe.

Khalid Zerouali from the Moroccan Interior Ministry says Europe's
seemingly insatiable demand for cannabis is still the main obstacle to
eradicating it completely.

"In terms of supply I think Morocco has done a lot.

"But we need also to master the demand. Last year about 22m people
consumed cannabis in Europe. That makes it very difficult.

"In terms of making the psychological costs so high for the traffickers
I think the seizures - last year 88 tonnes of cannabis - are very
important. The component that is very difficult for us because we don't
master it, is demand.

"I think in Europe there has to be an awareness of how to tackle that
demand."

But demand is not about to drop away, so the successes of the Moroccan
government in reducing supply may be hard to sustain.

It looks as if it will take more than olive trees to persuade some of
the most impoverished farmers in this region to give up their most
lucrative crop.

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Posted by http://www.lca-uk.org

LCA on Myspace; http://www.myspace.com/cannabis_people_uk

 

 

 

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