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Lebanon: Hash Makes A Comeback

Joshua Hammer

Newsweek (US)

Monday 17 Sep 2001

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The Bekaa Valley Regains Its Outlaw Reputation

Abu Ali is back in business. Wading through a fertile
field in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, the 30-year-old farmer
squeezes the bud of a seven-foot-high plant and rubs
the sticky juices between his fingers. The fragrant,
spiky-leafed crop extends for acres in every direction
--enough cannabis to make Cheech and Chong weep in envy.
From 1993 until last year, Ali (a pseudonym) struggled to
make a living growing sugar beets here, abandoning the
family's traditional cash crop--marijuana--in exchange
for promises of U.N. development money. "Every year
they told us this would be the year [the money
arrives]," says Ali. "Finally we got tired of waiting."
Last April he dusted off some old seeds he'd kept in dry
storage, and replanted 15 acres with cannabis--worth
$60,000 on the wholesale market. Ali knows the risks:
government helicopters recently dropped leaflets across
the Bekaa Valley, warning the farmers that they'd be
arrested if they harvested the crop. "We hear their
threats, but they mean nothing," says Ali, breathing
in the sweet aroma from his field of dreams. "We're
going to stay and fight."

It may not be an idle threat. Long a stronghold of
smugglers and Hizbullah guerrillas, this sun-baked
valley in the heart of Lebanon is fast regaining its
outlaw reputation. After a 10-year hiatus, ripening
fields of cannabis carpet the rugged hills above the
Bekaa as well as the drier flatlands, where many
farmers have tried to conceal the outlaw crop behind
rows of tobacco and corn. Hizbullah's influence is
growing as well. Drug experts say some cultivators
are in league with the guerrillas, who need funds
for their military campaign against Israel. The
proliferation of weed has become an embarrassment
for Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, who is
struggling to pay off his country's $25 billion debt
and attract foreign investment. With the harvest just
days away, Hariri and his government face a dilemma:
if they allow the farmers to bring their cannabis
crop to market, they risk forfeiting tens of millions
of dollars in international aid and undermining
Lebanon's attempts to improve its image abroad. If
they send in troops, they could face violent
resistance from Ali and other armed cultivators. Either
way, the conflict reveals how Lebanon's effort to
rejoin the international community is being dragged
down by forces from its chaotic past.

Drugs have a long tradition in the Bekaa Valley, from
he days of the Roman conquerors through Lebanon's civil
war, which ended in 1990. Cultivators and tribal drug
lords working with militias built up a thriving cannabis
trade that brought in $1.5 billion at its peak in 1988.
Ships packed with bars of Lebanese hash sailed out of
Beirut, Tripoli and other lawless ports, bound for
Egypt, Israel and Europe. Newly minted drug
multimillionaires built garish mansions across the
valley and stashed their fortunes overseas. The trade
collapsed during the worldwide crackdown on narcotics
led by the United States in the early 1990s. Under
pressure from the U.S. State Department, the occupying
Syrian Army plowed up the Bekaa's cannabis fields and
sprayed them with poison. The drug lords were forced
to sell off their villas, the militias melted away and
the farmers--who were promised U.N. irrigation projects,
alternative-crop subsidies and other incentives--agreed
to grow less lucrative produce, like plums and wheat.
But the funds never materialized. Mohammed Nasser El-
Ferjani, a top U.N. official in Lebanon, says donors
ponied up only $16.7 million of the $ 300 million the
United Nations claims it needs to develop Bekaa
agriculture. Western officials say the U.N. frittered
away the money it did receive through mismanagement and
malfeasance.

Under the circumstances, marijuana--easy to grow, well
uited to dry climates and highly profitable--was
irresistible to farmers who'd struggled to earn a living
growing labor-intensive legal crops. The Lebanese
government is in a deepening quandary over how to deal
with the outlaw crop. Hussein Husseini, the Bekaa Valley's
representative in Parliament, has urged Prime Minister
Hariri to offer the farmers one-time compensation, burn
the harvested weed and quickly make good on promises to
bring irrigation and other improvements to the Bekaa.
But Hariri has rejected the idea, claiming that
compensation would amount to a bribe and wouldn't be
fair to farmers who've resisted growing dope. Hariri
insists he'll send in the troops, though many observers
believe he's bluffing. "My suspicion is that the
harvest will be sold," says a Western diplomat. "Then
we'll say, 'OK, it happened one year--but if you want
any credibility in world markets, if you want the West
to help you globalize, this has got to stop'."

What Hariri is up against becomes clear during a drive
hrough the rugged hills northwest of Baalbek. Gunmen
from the Jaffar clan that controls much of the cannabis
trade prowl the road that twists past ripening fields of
dope, chasing off uninvited visitors. "The Jaffar clan
are born armed to the teeth," says Husseini. "It's a
way of life." And it's a tradition that won't die easily.


 

 

 

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