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Opium: Iraq’s Deadly New Export

by Patrick Cockburn

BAGHDAD - Farmers in southern Iraq have started to grow opium poppies in their fields for the first time, sparking fears that Iraq might become a serious drugs producer along the lines of Afghanistan.Rice farmers along the Euphrates, to the west of the city of Diwaniya, south of Baghdad, have stopped cultivating rice, for which the area is famous, and are instead planting poppies, Iraqi sources familiar with the area have told The Independent.0523 03

The shift to opium cultivation is still in its early stages but there is little the Iraqi government can do about it because rival Shia militias and their surrogates in the security forces control Diwaniya and its neighbourhood. There have been bloody clashes between militiamen, police, Iraqi army and US forces in the city over the past two months.

The shift to opium production is taking place in the well-irrigated land west and south of Diwaniya around the towns of Ash Shamiyah, al Ghammas and Ash Shinafiyah. The farmers are said to be having problems in growing the poppies because of the intense heat and high humidity. It is too dangerous for foreign journalists to visit Diwaniya but the start of opium poppy cultivation is attested by two students from there and a source in Basra familiar with the Iraqi drugs trade.

Drug smugglers have for long used Iraq as a transit point for heroin, produced from opium in laboratories in Afghanistan, being sent through Iran to rich markets in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf. Saddam Hussein’s security apparatus in Basra was reportedly heavily involved in the illicit trade. Opium poppies have hitherto not been grown in Iraq and the fact that they are being planted is a measure of the violence in southern Iraq. It is unlikely that the farmers’ decision was spontaneous and the gangs financing them are said to be “well-equipped with good vehicles and weapons and are well-organised”.

There is no inherent reason why the opium poppy should not be grown in the hot and well-watered land in southern Iraq. It was cultivated in the area as early as 3,400BC and was known to the ancient Sumerians as Hul Gil, the “joy plant”. Some of the earliest written references to the opium poppy come from clay tablets found in the ruins of the city of Nippur, just to the east of Diwaniya.

There has been an upsurge in violence not only in Diwaniya but in Basra, Nassariyah, Kut and other Shia cities of southern Iraq over the past 10 days. It receives limited attention outside Iraq because it has nothing to do with the fighting between the Sunni insurgents and US forces further north or the civil war between Shia and Sunni in Baghdad and central Iraq. The violence is also taking place in provinces that are too dangerous for journalists to visit. Aside from Basra, few foreign soldiers are killed.

The fighting is between rival Shia parties and militias, notably the Mehdi Army, who support the anti-US cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, and the Badr Organisation - the military wing of the recently renamed Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC). In many, though not all, areas of southern Iraq, the latter group controls the police.

The intra-militia violence in southern Iraq is essentially over control of profitable resources and the establishment of power bases. According to one report the violence in Diwaniya has been escalating for two months and was initially motivated by rivalry over control of opium production but soon widened into a general turf war.

The immediate cause of the fighting in Diwaniya that began on 16 May was the arrest of several members of the Mehdi Army. Other militiamen tried to rescue them and attacked the police (whom the Sadrists say are controlled by the SIIC). Troops from the Iraqi army and the US army were drawn into the fighting. The Sadrists sent 200 men as reinforcements into the city. Some 11 people, eight of them civilians, were killed on a single day. An American soldier was killed and two wounded in a Mehdi Army attack on Saturday. Diwaniya’s Governor, Khaleel Jaleel Hamza, who has moved his family to Iran for safety, announced “a pact of honour” to end the fighting on Monday. The agreement provides for foreign forces to be kept out of the city.

As in Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban in 2001, these conditions of primal anarchy are ideal for criminal gangs and drug smugglers and producers. The difference is that Afghanistan had long been a major producer of opium and possessed numerous laboratories experienced in turning opium into heroin. The Taliban, on the orders of its leader, Mullah Omar, had stopped its cultivation by farmers in the parts of Afghanistan it controlled. Farmers near the southern city of Kandahar grubbed up cauliflowers and planted poppies instead as soon as the US started bombing.

The grip of the British Army around Basra and other southern provinces was always tenuous and is now coming to an end. Although the government in Baghdad speaks of gradually taking control of security in the provinces from US and Britain, the winners in the new Iraq are the militia, often criminalised, that have colonised the Iraqi security forces. Diwaniya is in Qaddasiyah province, which was never under British control but the pattern in all parts of Shia Iraq is very similar.

The one factor currently militating against criminal gangs organising poppy cultivation in Iraq on a wide scale is that they are already making large profits from smuggling drugs from Iran. This is easy to do because of Iraq’s enormous and largely unguarded land borders with neighbouring states. Iraqis themselves are not significant consumers of heroin or other drugs.

But it is evident from the start of opium production around Diwaniya that some gangs think there is money to be made by following the example of Afghanistan. Given that they can guarantee much higher profits from growing opium poppies than can be made from rice, many impoverished Iraqi farmers are likely to cultivate the new crop.

© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited

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16 Comments so far

  1. Jaded Prole May 23rd, 2007 2:36 pm

    It’s an odd coincidence that wherever the Bush family and the CIA go, opium blossoms . . .

  2. MP May 23rd, 2007 2:36 pm

    gthtrndy

  3. Poet May 23rd, 2007 3:21 pm

    Just another road mark on the highway to nation building in Iraq. What’s next, privatized concentration camps?

  4. BekkaPoo May 23rd, 2007 4:16 pm

    Jaded Prole you took the words out of my mouth. Yep no one should be surprised about this new development.

  5. collidingrivers May 23rd, 2007 4:41 pm

    I wonder if this issue also has anything to do with the fact that when the US “helped restructure” Iraq, one of the inclusions was that Iraq would lose control of its own agriculture, with a new restrictions against their farmers using their heirloom, used-for-centuries seed stock. They would be forced to use seed from the US, agri-monsters! Are teh Iraqi farmers perhaps feeling like going to poppies is a way to maybe not participate in the new US sanctions?

  6. ezeflyer May 23rd, 2007 5:04 pm

    Another reason to legalize drugs and consider addiction a medical problem, not a criminal one.

  7. wdmax3 May 23rd, 2007 6:04 pm

    I thought this was the same article I read on www.truthout.org , but I guess they just used the same image from an article about Afghanistan’s booming opium business.

    This is fascinating because I like to read the articles from the fringes of the media, like the conspiracy theorists and Fox News. I read something about how the military (CIA, NSA, industrial military complex, etc…) has always been involved in the drug trade using profits to fund their campaigns. To be reading more of this now in Afghanistan and now Iraq only begs the question concerning the other theories about our administration, military coup, organized crime, so forth and so on.

    So we allow them to grow more opium than can be used for legitimate medicine, the surplus makes its way into the American drug market so our drug enforcement agencies can continue their efforts to eradicate the heroin menace in the war on drugs. Not to mention, the opium profits supporting terrorist organizations like Al Qaeda and their efforts to kill American soldiers (pause 5 minutes in the silence of disbelief).

    Nothing is starting to make sense anymore (yes, I meant to write it that way).

  8. Paul Bramscher May 23rd, 2007 6:18 pm

    We’re witnessing some large-scale turns of history these days. Time to read the Wikipedia entry on the opium wars.

    I’ve often wondered whether it’s realistic to expect, for instance, the US govt. to stop crazed terrorists crossing the Afghani borders, smuggling some enriched uranium, etc. Let’s assume for the sake of argument that this is indeed our job there. And yet we can’t stop thousands of tons of opium from leaving Afghanistan?!

    So which is it — we’re either failing terribly at stopping the drug trade (http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/pressrels/2004/unisnar869.html) or we’re succeeding at reinvigorating it? Or are these questions that ordinary people, such as ourselves, just shouldn’t be bothering ourselves with?

  9. damien May 23rd, 2007 8:09 pm

    Dont blame the U S drug problem on some dirt poor farmers in Iraq.

  10. Poet May 23rd, 2007 9:00 pm

    Collidingrivers–A most intersting comment on agricultural restrictions on Iraqi farmers. Can you tell me where you found the documentation on this? My address is:

    tlmac75@yahoo.com

  11. wdmax3 May 23rd, 2007 11:14 pm

    Would opium be considers a weapon of mass destruction?

  12. kalia May 24th, 2007 4:17 am

    The opium production and distribution needs to go on in accordance with free market forces. It would be a mistake to cut off the drug supplies in a precipitous manner. Life in Iraq as well as in the US is bad enough. Without the relief these drugs provide the people would be condemned to hell as it were.

  13. Gail May 24th, 2007 8:39 am

    With the newly proposed immigration bill and our open borders, the Iraqi opium trade will be booming. Why are they fighting us for their oil?

  14. ballerina May 24th, 2007 12:43 pm
  15. collidingrivers May 24th, 2007 11:46 pm

    Thanks for link to great article, Ballerina.
    (ATTN: Poet, there you go ;).

    The article mentions Vindana Shiva’s text, “Biopiracy”. She also wrote, “Stolen Harvest”- very quick, informative read, which will most likely blow anyone’s mind- it did for the entire class in a course I took.
    Shiva tells you some stuff about food that will shock and horrify you- and you who think you have been so informed, eating this and that, avoiding one thing or another- what surprises await you! I used to wonder, why do so many old “hippie” guys have “man tits”? Maybe it’s all the yummy soy they’ve been downing, completely loaded with the female hormone estrogen which is also present in baby’s soy formula, which is for the infant the same as ingesting up to 10 birth control pills a day! I have tried to avoid soy since then, but like, it’s in so much stuff!
    Extremely shocking also, from the “Stolen Harvest” text, is how right here in the uSA, these agri-monster seed companies had thousands of US farmers switch to their seeds, using the same tactics forced upon Iraqi farmers- and THEN they conspired a gigantic raid on thousands of these US farmers- to see if the farmers had any seed stored (they can no longer have the old varieties on their farm- at all), and they just raided them, and I can’t remember what was written about the number of arrests- did that shit make the Fox News evening report? No way! Is this some freaky kind of an era, or what, where thousands of farmers are harrassed this way- State and Industry conspiring against them together- and the rest of us don’t hear about it, until somebody like Shiva tries to let us know- listen to that woman, she wants to help raise awareness about these important issues and events, and help bring about more of a “Food Democracy”.

  16. MA_Matriarch May 25th, 2007 2:56 am

    Jade wrote the thoughts that were going on in my head too. It is one vicious circle wdmax3!

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