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Morocco: Morocco Targets Cannabis But Production Soars

Daily Times (Pakistan)

Wednesday 21 Jan 2004

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( Reuters ) - The waiter spread the word quickly around the Cafe de la Plage:
"Stop rolling, cops are coming!"

As the manager switched off the reggae music, customers hurriedly threw
cannabis and rolling paper onto the beach in front of the psychedelically
painted haunt in the Moroccan capital Rabat.

The plainclothes police who arrived took 30 people with them when they left.
All are likely to be charged with possessing drugs.

"They should not be jailing smokers but those who plant cannabis. How can you
jail someone for consuming a national product?" said Rachid Moudni, a debt
collector visiting the cafe on the day of the raid. Moudni's scepticism mirrors
that of many other Moroccans, angry with government targeting users in a
country that produces most of Europe's cannabis.

"Police are doing little to break the supply chain that starts with the
farmer," said a bank employee also at the cafe, who asked to be identified only
as Mohammed.

Not far from the shores of southern Europe, Morocco's Rif area is the world' s
leading producer of cannabis. Two thirds of the drug circulating in Europe is
said to originate from the mountainous northern area, where thousands of
hectares are planted almost in the open.

A recent UN-sponsored report said cannabis cultivation in the Rif, which dates
back to the 15th century, has spread rapidly over the past two decades from
small patches in only two provinces to 134,000 hectares in six provinces.

But efforts to target the producers have failed in the face of corruption,
poverty and the Rif's isolation from the rest of the country.

In the village of Zoumi, a five-hour bumpy ride 220 km north of Rabat, many
farmers have started growing cannabis.

"A hundred kilos yield 10,000-20,000 Moroccan dirhams while 100 kilos of wheat
will give you only 250 to 300 dirhams," said one farmer, who asked to be
identified only as Mustafa. These profit margins have made the drug an
attractive investment.

"A link can be established between cannabis production and the relatively weak
level of social and economic development of the production region," said the
UN-backed report.

In addition to farmers, the cannabis supply chain employs thousands, from
drivers to dealers, in a country where urban unemployment runs to 20 percent
and one in five people live below the poverty line. And farmers in Zoumi say
authorities also take a cut of the drug cultivation windfall.

"From planting, irrigation, harvest to commercialisation, the farmer pays money
to buy their ( authorities ) silence, otherwise he faces the law," said farmer
Ahmed.

"Authorities take more than half of the revenues," added Saadia, a farmer in
her early 70s.




 

 

 

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