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Nepal: Nepal cashes in on cannabis

Sudha Ramachandran

Asia Times Online

Wednesday 21 Apr 2004

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BANGALORE - Three decades after Nepal tried to shake off its "haven for
hippies and hashish" label by banning narcotics, this Himalayan kingdom
appears poised to hit a new high, with the ongoing Maoist insurgency that
is now raging in the country being blamed for the current spurt in production.

While almost all of Nepal's 75 districts have been affected by the
insurgency, the Maoists are said to be in full control of at least five
western districts - Rukum, Dolpa, Rolpa, Salyan and Pyuthun. These five
districts account for most of the illicit cultivation of cannabis, the
plant marijuana and hashish is prepared from.

According to the United Nations International Narcotics Control Board
Report 2003, "Cannabis grows wild in the high hills of the central,
mid-western and far western parts of Nepal, where illicit crop eradication
is expensive due to the difficult terrain." Officials find the mountainous
areas difficult to access. What is more, they find it difficult to detect
illicit crops since "they are interspersed among licit crops", points out
the report.

Cannabis cultivated in southern Nepal has also registered an increase.
Districts like Parsa, Bara and Mahottari of the southern plains are the
largest producers of cannabis. Most of the cannabis grown here is sent
across Nepal's porous border with India into the states of Uttar Pradesh
and Bihar, from where it proceeds to Delhi and Mumbai and thereon to Europe
and the Middle East.

While there is no data regarding the acreage of land that might be under
cannabis cultivation, one estimate put out by agents of the National Drug
Law Enforcement Unit a couple of years ago claimed that it is cultivated in
18 of Nepal's 75 districts and that it grows wild in an additional 21
districts. The variety that grows wild is said to be used to produce
high-grade hashish.

Cannabis isn't the only drug being cultivated in the kingdom. According to
the UN report, the "illicit cultivation of opium poppy occurs on a small
scale" in Nepal "but it is increasing". The spurt in opium cultivation in
Nepal in recent years has been attributed to the Maoist insurgency in the
country. The Maoists, who are demanding the dismantling of the monarchy and
the establishment of a secular, republican state, are in control of vast
areas of rural Nepal.

In comparison with other countries in the neighborhood like Afghanistan,
which accounts for two-thirds of the world's total opium cultivation, and
Myanmar, which is the world's second largest opium producer, the amount of
opium cultivated in Nepal might seem small. But what makes it an area of
concern, according to Nepali officials, is the pace at which the
cultivation is growing and the enormous difficulties that are being
encountered in fighting the problem in the predominantly mountainous country.

If in the 1960s and early 1970s narco-tourists swarmed to this idyllic
country in the Himalayas, today it is small-time dope peddlers and big
narco-barons who are drawn by the potential Nepal holds for their business.
Nepal's impoverished rural people are understandably tempted by the huge
profits that drug cultivation brings. Drug barons are said to be
encouraging Nepali farmers to grow opium and cannabis on their land. It is
said that Indian drug traffickers provide know-how to the farmers, helping
them with seeds and information on cultivation of more potent varieties of
cannabis.

Insurgent links
Sandwiched between the world's largest opium producing areas, the Golden
Triangle and the Golden Crescent, South Asia is a major transit point in
the international narcotics trade. South Asia is home to a large number of
insurgent and terrorist groups. These groups are important links in the
narcotics trade, using the money from drugs to fund their weapon purchases.

Maoist sympathizers insist that the rebels do not use drug money to
bankroll their operations. Nepali and Indian sources dismiss such claims.
"Recent raids and arrests have indicated that the Maoists are supporting
the export of illicit narcotics," says Kumar Poudel, chief of Nepal's
Division of Narcotic Control and Disaster Prevention, the country's leading
body tackling the narcotics trade. Indian intelligence officials share this
view. Drug money, they say, is financing the Maoists' weapon purchases.
Expatriate Nepali youth who are sympathizers of the Maoists are said to be
engaging in trafficking drugs, with the proceeds being used to buy arms.

Even if the Maoists are not engaging in cannabis or opium cultivation
themselves or using the narcotics trade to finance their operations, it
cannot be denied that they are condoning this illegal activity. The Maoists
have imposed a ban on use of alcohol in areas under their control. This ban
is hugely popular among rural women as it is said to have reduced
alcoholism and domestic violence. But such attempts at moral policing do
not seem to apply to the cultivation of cannabis.

The Maoist leadership has said nothing about cannabis cultivation and
production goes on unhindered. There is no way that the Maoists would not
be aware of cannabis cultivation that goes on in territory under their
complete control. It is believed that the Maoists are reluctant to clamp
down on cultivation as the move would antagonize their social base among
Nepali cultivators, whose livelihood depends on the illegal crops.
According to Nepali officials, the Maoists allow the rural folk to
cultivate cannabis and demand protection money from them.

The main thrust of Nepal's effort to tackle the narcotics problem appears
to be the interception of consignments. Law enforcement agencies in Nepal
and India have intercepted large consignments of cannabis resin - some of
the consignments weigh several hundred kilograms - produced in Nepal and en
route to India.

The government has not been very effective in tackling cultivation of
cannabis. "With the government's writ not running in large swathes of rural
Nepal, the authorities are not able to police the areas," one Nepali
official said. Besides, the "police and army are too preoccupied with the
counter-insurgency operations to fight farmers engaging in illicit
cultivation of cannabis or to take action against them".

According to the UN report, Nepal is not adopting stringent laws to fight
its narcotics problem. It has not signed on to some international
conventions that aim at fighting the problem. Nepal's Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act 1982 is said to be inadequate to deal with crimes like money
laundering or to investigate the proceeds from drug trading. However, the
government has done nothing to amend this flawed piece of legislation.



 

 

 

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