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Iraq, Afghanistan: corporate seeds and glyphosate saturation (7/12/2004)

Not so long ago we published some speculative comments about the possibility of GM wheat being introduced into Iraq, a breadbasket of the Middle East and the genetic origin of most wheat cultivated today. This followed news that the US has imposed laws forbidding Iraqi farmers from saving their own seeds.
http://www.lobbywatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4560

In a nation where 97% of farmers save their own seeds, they will now be forced to buy seeds from multinationals - the leading company being Monsanto. See: GRAIN, "Iraq's new patent law: a declaration of war against farmers", New from Grain, 16 June 2004, http://www.grain.org/articles/?id=6

Now it's emerged that USAID are distributing wheat seeds in opium-growing areas of Afghanistan at the same time that the US is about to begin spraying these areas with Monsanto's glyphosate (see items below).

Glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, is a broad-spectrum herbicide that will kill all conventional crops - but not GM herbicide-resistant (RR) crops.

Monsanto's GM wheat (MON 71800), which is modified to be glyphosate-resistant, is one of the few crops that would survive such applications.

It has been suggested there could be no better opportunity than in Iraq and Afghanistan for the Monsanto-infiltrated US Administration and the fanatically pro-GM USAID to force its unpopular GM wheat, which has been rejected by the rest of the world, on subject nations.

What follows may reflect no more than unhappy coincidence but a certain level of suspicion is understandable given the extreme lengths to which the Bush administration seems prepared to go in order to promote the US corporate agenda, and when the USAID website candidly admits: "The principal beneficiary of America's foreign assistance programs has always been the United States... Foreign assistance programs have helped create major markets for agricultural goods."

For more on USAID: http://www.lobbywatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=165
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EXTRACT: "This weekend, the American development agency USAID is due to announce the distribution of 500 tonnes of wheat seed for Nangahar province, of which Tora Bora is a part."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4066525.stm
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US PILOTS to SPRAY AFGHAN POPPY FIELDS
by Nick Meo in Kabul
Independent on Sunday (UK), 7 November 04

The US is preparing to destroy Afghanistan's opium poppy crop from the air next spring, before it can be harvested, brushing aside objections from aid
agencies.

The operation, modelled on controversial efforts to wipe out cocaine-growing in Colombia, reflects growing concern in Washington that the opium trade is financing al-Q'aida-linked terrorist groups and posing a grave threat to the region's stability. Hundreds of private security contractors and pilots will be hired to spray herbicides from low-flying aircraft.

Senior American officials barely disguise their impatience with British-led efforts at eradication, which have failed to stop a massive increase in Afghanpoppy-growing. An annual UN report out next week will show a 64 per cent increase in the area planted over the past year.

"It's time the stick was wielded and farmers understood there is a risk if they plant opium", said a Western official in Kabul. "Some of them will have a rough time, but there simply has to be enough eradication that farmers see risk attached to this business."

Eradication missions are likely to begin in February or March in the southern province of Helmand, although it has not yet been decided whether to begin with an experiment in one area or launch the operation across the country. An American-led campaign targeting drug barons is also expected to start in the next few weeks, with US officials promising to extradite any who can be linked to heroin smuggled into America.

The Pentagon has overridden objections from USAid, the official American aid organisation, as well as Britain's Department for International Development.

US troops have expressed fears of being dragged into a drugs war, in which Britain's 1,700 soldiers in Afghanistan could also be embroiled. Britain is also expected to have a major intelligence role in anti-narcotics operations.

A Colombia-style operation in Afghanistan could spark rural rebellions, increase support for the Taliban's insurgency and perhaps cause damage to the environment and health, according to critics. They fear that destroying a crop on which an estimated two million farmers and their families now depend for their livelihoods could impoverish whole provinces without stopping the massive flow of heroin to Europe.

The herbicide glyphosate, used in Colombia, is reported to have causedsevere skin rashes and other illnesses. If it is accidentally sprayed over legitimate crops, innocent farmers could suffer, and local famines might result.

Critics complain that little is being done to warn farmers that their crops will be destroyed, even though it could make them decide against planting poppies this month. "If this is to be effective they should be showing farmers that they are really serious," one agriculture expert said. "The best  way to combat poppy cultivation is to dissuade farmers from growing it in the first place."

"The other step is disrupting the smuggling networks and the seven or eight big figures who control the opium smuggling business. Afghans mightmore faith in anti-narcotic measures if pressure was put on the big fish."

Many analysts believe Plan Colombia, the US-funded war against cocaine trade, has proved ineffective. Much of the trade has relocated to neighbouring countries, and the price of cocaine in America has remained the same.
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Mistrust hampers Afghan opium battle
By Andrew North
BBC correspondent, Tora Bora
Saturday, 4 December, 2004
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4066525.stm

Like the walls of a giant fortress, the snow-covered peaks of the Spin Ghar, or White Mountains, rise from the haze as you drive south from Jalalabad.

It is a spectacular landscape, but one swirling in rumour and tension these days.

Buttressing these peaks are the wooded hills of Tora Bora, famous now as the last known hiding place of Osama Bin Laden.

But today it is the setting for another battle, one arguably far more important to Afghanistan's future.

This is one of the main areas for growing opium poppy - source for most of the world's heroin.

With a recent UN report showing a two-thirds rise in poppy cultivation this year, Afghan and international efforts to curb the illegal trade are
intensifying.

Grey pellets

Yet there are signs such efforts could already be failing.

In the villages abutting Tora Bora's slopes, people are angry.

They believe unidentified aircraft have been secretly spraying herbicide on their opium fields, which they say they depend on for survival.

Most people here point the finger at the Americans or the British, the lead players in international efforts to combat the Afghan drugs trade.

"I heard the planes late at night about 10 days ago, circling above," says farmer Nader Khan, who lives in Pachir wa Agam district.

In the morning, he described seeing tiny grey pellets spread across his fields.

"I had planted just a small piece of land with poppy," he insists, showing me the size of the plants, no more than 10cm high.

"But now all the plants are finished. Some of my other crops were killed too."

Denials

Giving me a tour of his land, he points out a patch of wilting and yellowing onions, although there was no way of telling if this was bec

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