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Morocco losing position as top cannabis grower-UN

Tom Pfeiffer

Reuters

Thursday 27 Mar 2008

Source: Reuters
Date: March 27 2008
Author: Tom Pfeiffer

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RABAT, March 27 (Reuters) - Morocco appears to be losing its position as
the world's top cannabis grower to Afghanistan after a drive to
eradicate the crop in the African country's impoverished north, the head
of the U.N. anti-drugs agency said.

Morocco's multi-billion dollar cannabis harvest almost halved from 2003
to 2006 after officials ordered the destruction of crops, farmers were
encouraged to seek other sources of income and drought depleted yields.

Some 70,000 hectares of the dark green, fern-like plant were grown in
Morocco in 2006, said Antonia Maria Costa, executive director of the
U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

"I think we are around 60,000 hectares at the moment, although the
survey is still ongoing," he told Reuters by telephone.

In lawless Afghanistan, however, the opposite is happening.

"What we've seen for sure is a gigantic increase in cultivation of
cannabis in Afghanistan," said Costa. "It may very well have overtaken
Morocco."

A scientific study of drug cultivation in Afghanistan last year showed a
cannabis crop of about 70,000 hectares, he said.

Cannabis cultivation also seemed to be on the rise in the Middle East in
Sinai, eastern Lebanon and even parts of Iraq, he said.

Rabat was accused for years of failing to develop Morocco's rugged and
isolated Rif mountains where families grow cannabis to stave off
grinding poverty.

To draw investment and help lift the region out of poverty, it opened
the kingdom's largest container terminal near Tangier last year and is
setting up a chain of free trade zones nearby.

Four years ago Morocco's hashish trade netted an estimated $12 billion
for dealers and for drug barons who benefited from the complicity of
local officials.

Around a quarter of that sum filtered back into the Moroccan economy.

Spurred on by suspicions that sales from hashish helped pay for
terrorist activities, Moroccan authorities have tightened drug controls
at ports and installed scanners able to detect cannabis within large
trucks and containers.

While Morocco remains the world's biggest exporter of processed
cannabis, a record 35 tonnes of hashish were seized in Tangier port last
year, up 25 percent from 2006.

Costa said that had prompted a shift in tactics by trafficking networks.

"We now see more cannabis being shifted east across north Africa and
reaching the shores of Europe in Italy and Greece," he said. "There are
reports that some of the money is funding terrorist cells, including
groups in Algeria."

Cannabis is the most widely consumed illicit drug globally. Cannabis
herb production slipped 6 percent to 42,000 tonnes in 2005, according to
U.N. estimates.

http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnL27778659.html

 

 

 

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