Factbox: Security developments in Afghanistan

KUNAR – A female suicide bomber wounded 18 people including three police officers in an attack on a police check post in the Shigal district of eastern Kunar province on Monday, the Interior Ministry said.

* HELMAND – Three would-be-suicide bombers were killed when their suicide vests went off in the Marjah town of southern Helmand province on Monday, Interior Ministry said.

* HERAT – Five civilians were killed and three wounded when their car was hit by a roadside bomb in western Herat province on Monday, said Abdul Rahoof, a local police official.

SOUTHERN AFGHANISTAN – A member of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) died of wounds sustained in an insurgent attack in southern Afghanistan on Monday, the alliance said in a statement.

HELMAND – ISAF and Afghan troops seized 1,650 kg (3,637 lb) of opium and 10 kg of heroin during a vehicle search in southern Helmand province, detaining two passengers, the alliance said in a statement. Separately, an ISAF patrol found 1,630 kg of opium in an abandoned vehicle.

(1 kg = 2.2 pounds)

(Compiled by Dan Williams; Editing by David Fox and Sanjeev Miglani)

Opium worth $12,816 seized in Hong Kong

Hong Kong, May 26 (IANS) Opium worth 100,000 HK dollars ($12,816) soaked with clothing items were seized at the Hong Kong airport, Customs officials said.

The officials have recovered 11 items of clothing soaked with opium which was being smuggled from Laos to the United States, according to Xinhua.

The drug was found Monday when the officials were inspecting a parcel declared as ‘cotton woven dresses’ which smelled unusual

Iran hangs six drug traffickers – media

Iran hanged six convicted drug traffickers in a prison west of Tehran on Saturday, the semi-official Fars News Agency reported.

Murder, adultery, rape, armed robbery, drug trafficking and apostasy are all punishable by death under Iranian Sharia law practised since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Amnesty International says Iran had the second highest number of executions in 2009 after China, adding that about a third of its 388 executions took place in eight weeks of turmoil following a disputed June presidential election.

Those put to death on Saturday in the city of Karaj were sentenced for carrying and trafficking drugs including heroin and opium, Fars reported, citing the judiciary.

One of the men, Abbas Gravand, was found guilty of possessing 386 grams of heroin. Another, Saeed Mikaeli, was sentenced for possessing and selling 422 grams of crack.

Iran is a key transit route for narcotics smuggled from neighbouring Afghanistan, which produces more than 90 percent of the world’s supply of opium, to the West and elsewhere. Opium is used to make heroin.

Last year, Iran’s police chief, Esmail Ahmadi-Moghaddam, said about 130,000 people in the country of 70 million become addicted to drugs each year.

The Iranian judiciary is stepping up its fight against the drugs trade but a large part of the “narcotics mafia” is based outside the country, he added.

In March, Iranian media said five men convicted of various crimes including drug smuggling and rape were put to death in the southeastern province of Kerman.

Iran’s human rights record is often criticized by the West. Tehran rejects claims it is violating human rights and accuses the West of double standards and hypocrisy.

(Writing by Fredrik Dahl; editing by )

A renewed police focus on heroin

A significant spike in the number of heroin overdoses in Western Australia last year has forced senior police to shift their focus from amphetamine based drugs such as speed and ecstasy to opiates.

This week, the decision by the Organised Crime Squad to start seriously targeting Perth’s heroin dealers again reaped rewards with the arrest of five people and the seizure of 250 grams of high grade heroin.

Detective Superintendent Charlie Carver told a media conference that early tests of the drug had found it to be about 60 per cent pure.

“The stronger the purity of the heroin, the closer it is to the source before it gets cut. The average street strength of heroin in 7.5 to 10 per cent and this 60 per cent so basically you are right near the source of the heroin coming into the country.”

Police wouldn’t comment directly on the value of the haul but it’s understood that quantity of high grade heroin could be cut four times and fetch about half a million dollars on the street.

The seizure followed raids on three homes in Morley and Beechboro on Tuesday where the alleged drug dealers were arrested. Among them, a husband and wife.

Police are also alleged to have found $225,000 in cash and four weapons.

“Three of those pistols were loaded when the Tactical Response Group entered the premises,” Detective Superintendent Carver said.

Afghanistan is still the world’s largest producer of opium and it is still the source of most of the heroin in Australia.

Police would not say whether the drug had come into Western Australia direct or via the eastern states.

“It comes across the borders into Australia and it will be alleged obviously they have international connections to bring that heroin into this country,” he said.

“Some of the heroin was in powder form, some in block form. Some of it was fluffy like talcum powder.

“When you are seizing heroin that’s nearly 60 per cent pure that is very unusual and we’re very happy to take it off the streets. Lives have been saved because of this seizure.”

Last year 29 people died from suspected drug overdoses. There have been eight deaths so far this year.

Carol Daws is the Chief Executive Officer of Cyrenian House, a not for profit, non-government drug and alcohol treatment centre. She has witnessed a steady rise in the use of heroin among hard core drug users.

“It’s certainly not like the resurgence we saw in the late 1990′s where there was just heroin everywhere,” Ms Daws said.

“We saw a spike towards the end of last year but it’s only an increase in the sense that you’ve had very little people presenting with heroin before.”

Certainly in recent years, the Organised Crime Squad has been focusing most of its efforts on the dramatic rise in the use and availability of amphetamine type substances.

But hard core heroin addicts making fatal miscalculations about the amount of drug they are using and this week’s big seizure will force police to target the opiate as a high priority again.

Mohammad Asif vows never to repeat his past mistakes

Islamabad, Aug.26 (ANI): Tainted Pakistan pacer Mohammad Asif has vowed not to repeat his past mistakes which saw him being banned from international cricket for a year.

In an interview with PakPassion.net, Asif expressed happiness over his selection in the 15 member squad for the ICC Champions Trophy and said he would justify the selectors’ decision through his performance.

“There will be no mistakes this time around. I am extremely happy and grateful that I am back in the Pakistan team and I want to work hard and justify the decision by the selectors,” Asif said.

“I don’t want to let anyone down, especially myself and the fans and I will do my utmost to help Pakistan perform well in South Africa,” he added.

Asif was banned from international cricket for one year after failing a dope test. His ban expires on September 22, the day Champions Trophy is scheduled to begin in South Africa.

Asif’s career had plummeted after he failed a dope test during the Indian Premier League’s (IPL) inaugural season.

He was also detained at the Dubai airport for 19 days for carrying an illegal substance (opium) while returning from India.

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) had also slapped a fine of one million rupees on Asif for his Dubai ‘misadventure’. (ANI)

Gwalior opium farmers stage protest for re-allotment of their lands

Gwalior, Aug 25 (ANI): More than 100 opium farmers here took to the streets demanding their lands back.

Farmers from Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan gathered in front of the office of the local Narcotics Commissioner.

Their demands include the revival of their cancelled land deeds, raising minimum support price for their crop and license to grow upto 48 kilograms opium per hectare.

Some agitated farmers, squatting outside the Narcotics Commissioner’s office for two days, took off their clothes in protest after they failed to meet the narcotics commissioner for the second day.

“We are protesting for one justified demand…during 2001 to 2008 opium farmers have suffered a huge loss because of hailstorms, cold wave and other natural reasons… Despite our losses, the Narcotics Commissioner has cancelled our allotments, even though we produced the collector’s survey damage report… We demand the revival of the title of the lands,” said Saurabh Jain, Convenor, Opium Farmers Struggle Committee, Rajasthan.

India is one of the world’s top producers of opium and is the sole producer of licit opium gum utilized by the world’s pharmaceutical industries to produce codeine, morphine, narcotine, thebaine, papaverine and other medical products.

While remote mountainous areas like Kulu-Manali are more in the news as poppy cultivation areas, mostly due to the illicit crops destroyed, the highest yields come from the Indo-Gangetic plains constituting Uttar Pradesh and parts of Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan.

Opium cultivation and processing in India is strictly regulated by the Central Bureau of Narcotics (CBN), as per provisions of Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act (India), 1985 and Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Rules (India), 1985.

Peasants are licensed to grow a certain area in poppy and government factories process the opium. The Ghazipur factory in Uttar Pradesh is about 150 years old while another plant at Neemuch in Madhya Pradesh was set up in the 1930′s. (ANI)

PCB to consider Akhtar, Asif for Champions trophy: Bari

Lahore, July 10 (ANI): Controversial Pakistan fast bowlers Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif would be considered for selection for the ICC Champions Trophy scheduled to be held in September-October in South Africa, interim chief selector Wasim Bari has said.

“Asif’s ban will expire on September 22, two days before the Trophy starts, so he will be considered for the squad, and Akhtar will also be considered once he proves his fitness,” The Daily Times quoted Bari, as saying.

Akhtar last played for Pakistan in the five-match ODI series against Australia in the UAE.

He was initially selected in the team for the World Twenty20 Championship, but was later axed after a PCB medical committee declared him unfit due to a skin infection.

Asif, 25, was held at Dubai airport in June last year while returning home from India, and was charged with possessing a small amount of opium.

The pacer was also banned by the Indian Premier League (IPL) after he tested positive for banned anabolic steroid, nandrolone last summer while featuring in the inaugural season of the Twenty20 spectacle for Delhi Daredevils. He is currently serving a year’s ban. (ANI)

PCB fines Asif for Dubai drugs detention

Lahore, July 2 (ANI): Pakistani cricket authorities on Thursday fined Mohammad Asif one million rupees (12,500 dollars) over the fast bowler’s 19-day detention at Dubai airport for alleged drug possession.

Asif, 26, was detained last June on his way back home after playing in the Indian Premier League (IPL).

A three-member Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) committee headed by former captain and PCB director Wasim Bari investigated the matter.

“On recommendation of the committee we have fined Asif one million rupees,” the PCB said in a press release.

Dubai authorities found opium in Asif’s possession, but a prosecutor determined that the quantity was small and deported the bowler, The News reports.

Asif is also banned from playing international cricket until September after testing positive for the banned anabolic steroid Nandrolone last year.

“Asif will be available for selection once he completes the IPL ban,” said the release.

The fast bowler also tested positive for Nandrolone during tests conducted by the PCB in 2006. He and fellow bowler Shoaib Akhtar, who failed the test too, were banned for one and two years respectively. (ANI)

U.S. marines attempting to retake Helmand Valley from Taliban

Kabul, July 2 (ANI): Almost 4,000 United States Marines, backed by helicopter gun ships, are attempting to regain control of the volatile Helmand River valley in southwestern Afghanistan, which currently is occupied by the Taliban.

The valley is known for its poppy harvests and opium smuggling.

According to a New York Times report, the Marine Expeditionary Brigade is leading the operation, which has been described as the first major push in southern Afghanistan by the newly bolstered American force.

Helmand is one of the deadliest provinces in Afghanistan, where Taliban fighters have practiced sleek, hit-and-run guerrilla warfare against the British forces based there.

US Marine sources said “Operation Khanjar”, will include more troops and resources than ever before, as well as a commitment by the troops to live and patrol near population centers to ensure that residents are protected.

More than 600 Afghan soldiers and police officers are also involved.

The Marines will be pushing into areas where NATO and Afghan troops have not previously established a permanent presence. As part of the counterinsurgency strategy, the troops will meet with local leaders, help determine their needs and take a variety of actions to make towns and villages more secure. (ANI)

US initiates historic shift in Afghan counter-narcotics policy

London, July 1 (ANI): The International Council on Security and Development (ICOS) today hailed the monumental move by the US to stop the failed policy of poppy crop eradication in Afghanistan.

It also called on the US, UK and the international community to back its “Poppy for Medicine” proposal in the war-torn country.

On Saturday, the US announced that it would withdraw its support for efforts to eradicate opium cultivation in Afghanistan.

Richard Holbrooke, the US envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, said that eradication “didn’t reduce the amount of money the Taliban got by one dollar.”

Shortly after the Taliban fell in 2001, the US-led international community in Afghanistan adopted eradication as part of their counter-narcotics policy in an attempt to curtail the opium crisis.

Since then, eradication policies have been inefficient and counter-productive in winning the hearts and minds of the Afghan people.

“Eradication provides the Taliban insurgency with an even more valuable currency than money, and that is loyalty,” said Emmanuel Reinert, Executive Director of ICOS.

“Farmers have turned against the US and ISAF military when their livelihoods were destroyed; with the US stopping its own eradication policies, the West has a real opportunity to turn the situation around and build trust with the Afghan people.”

“This move by the US represents a ‘historic shift’ in its counter-narcotics policy, yet it won’t go far enough to alleviate the opium crisis in Afghanistan,” said Reinert.

“In addition to ending poppy eradication programs, our Poppy for Medicine proposal is a crucial step to successfully cutting off Taliban supplies and provide sustainable and viable livelihoods to Afghan farmers.”

After the US announcement, the UK government spoke out against the new stance by the US and vowed to continue its own eradication efforts.

“I would urge the UK and the entire international community to eliminate poppy crop eradication from their counter-narcotics policy in Afghanistan, and to support a truly viable alternative based on scientific study, namely, Poppy for Medicine,” said Raymond Kendall, Former Secretary-General of Interpol and a Member of the ICOS Advisory Board.

The Council called on the US to implement its proposed Poppy for Medicine programme to license the growing of the poppy crop in Afghanistan for localised, tightly controlled production of morphine, currently unavailable to 80 percent of the world’s population.

Since 2005, ICOS has conducted intense research on its Poppy for Medicine initiative. The European Parliament endorsed the proposal in October 2007, yet was rejected on several occasions by the Bush Administration since005.

“The Poppy for Medicine programme, if implemented, would function as a counter-insurgency initiative which would end Taliban funding through drugs trafficking and drive a wedge between insurgents and poppy farmers.

Changing Afghanistan’s counter-narcotics policy is a first bid to win back the hearts and minds of Afghanistan´s 2.4 million farmers currently dependent on illegal poppy cultivation,” he added.(ANI)

Pakistan has an estimated 5 million drug addicts

Islamabad, June 28 (ANI): The Karachi Port Trust (KPT) has estimated that there are about 5 million drug addicts in Pakistan, and that the invasion of drugs is affecting younger people in the country.

KPT Chairperson Nasreen Haque revealed this fact during a seminar at its Staff College on Friday, which was aimed at creating awareness about drug abuse and to prevent it in the society.

She further said that drugs that reach the country under various garbs are threatening to control people’s lives.

She also stressed the need for measures to keep the invasion of such drugs in check.

She said that the country has a colossal problem at hand, and that a committed response was required to address it effectively.

Nasreen insisted that synergistic efforts were required to implement various drug prevention and treatment strategies.

She pointed out that the drug situation was witnessing changing trends, and that people were increasingly turning to Charas, Opium and Heroin.

According to her, synthetic drugs like Ecstasy and Ketamine had also gained popularity and are finding place in parties held in posh localities.

She congratulated the United Nations Association of Pakistan for organising the awareness program, and said that the social disease is to be fought at all levels – individual, parental, community, societal, administrative, legal and educational. (ANI)

US set to target Afghan poppy trade to wipe out Taliban’s main financial source

Zangabad (Afghanistan), Apr.29 (ANI): The United States, is planning to wipe out the multi-million dollar opium crop business in Afghanistan, which serves as the Taliban’s main financial source.

According to a New York Times report, the Obama Administration is planning to send 20,000 Marines and soldiers into Helmand, Kandahar and Zabul region of Afghanistan to cut off Taliban’s main source of money.

“Opium is their financial engine. That is why we think they will fight for these areas,” the deputy commander of NATO forces in southern Afghanistan, Brigadier General John Nicholson, said.

According to a report, American troops will push into areas where few or no troops have been before to crush the trade which now makes up 90 percent of the world’s total and 60 percent of Afghanistan’s gross domestic product.

Sources said that the maximum number of US soldiers will spread out along the 550- mile-long mountainous southern border with Pakistan.

A special armored vehicle Stryker would be used by the soldiers, as it is relatively quick and can roam across vast areas that span the frontier, the report said. (ANI)

Boycott of Swat’s ‘blood emeralds’ urged

Lahore, Apr 28 (ANI): A campaign is already afoot to boycott the purchase of Swat’s famous emeralds, because the money could be used to buy mortars, roadside bombs and suicide belts for the Taliban.

The “blood emeralds” have joined the Afghan opium as a source of Taliban lucre.

Swat is rich in orchards, timber – and gems. The Taliban have seized two of the emerald mines, declared them a trust and are mining them round the clock.

The profits are split between the Taliban and the miners, making these coveted jobs in an area where fighting has destroyed the tourism industry and much else, the Daily Times reports.

Estimates differ as to the quality of Swat emeralds. Some Pakistanis claim they are magnificent.

Jean Claude Michelou, the emerald dealer who advises the World Bank on developing Pakistan’s gemstone sector, says that most are tiny and used mostly for what jewellers call “baguette accents” to ornament rings or watches.

The smaller they are, the harder it is to trace their origin. But the bottom line is that Swat emeralds can net the Taliban about 2 million pound a year.

There is a proposal now to extending to emeralds the international Kimberley Process of verification, which it is claimed curbed Africa’s diamonds-for-guns trade.

The Responsible Jewellery Council formed by industry leaders in 2006 has also boycotted Burmese rubies and jade and has just finalised a code of practice for gem mining. (ANI)

Fighting with Paris Hilton can take you places!

New York, Apr 12 (ANI): A DJ who had gotten into a fight with Paris Hilton is now seeing his career take-off.

Steve Angello recently made news by having the socialite kicked out of his music booth, reports The New York Post.

And now, he is all set to perform at the opening of the new Opium at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood, Florida.

The ribbon cutting ceremony to celebrate the gig will be done by none other than Hilton’s former pal, Kim Kardashian.

Meanwhile, Hilton is currently dating The Hills star Doug Reinhardt.

The hotel heiress has also referred to her intention to marry Reinhardt, saying “He’s gonna be my husband.” (ANI)

Suicide attack kills five policemen in southern Afghanistan

Kabul – A suicide bomber attacked a counternarcotics police unit in southern Afghanistan Thursday, killing five officers and wounding two, a police official said.

The attack, carried out by a bomber wearing a suicide vest, took place in Lashkargah, the capital of Helmand province, when counternarcotics police were embarking on a mission, deputy provincial police chief Kamaluddin Khan said.

“The bomber jumped in front of the convoy that was leaving the station,” Khan said.

Daoud Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said that according to their initial information, three children were also killed in the attack.

But Khan, who said he was at the scene of the attack, did not confirm the civilians deaths.

Helmand is the largest opium-producing province in the country. The Taliban are believed to be the main beneficiaries from the illicit drug business in Afghanistan. The war-torn country supplies more than 90 per cent of the world’s opiates. (dpa)

Asif now accused as ‘home-wrecker’ by film actor

Lahore, Apr.4 (ANI): The list of controversies and scandals is getting longer by the day for banned Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Asif, as he has now been accused of being a ‘home-wrecker’ by a film actor Babrak Shah.

According to The Daily Times, Shah has accused Asif of destroying his marital life.

“I was happily married to Veena when Asif interrupted my married life by wooing Veena and he succeeded,” Shah said.

Shah said he has already divorced Veena Malik, a film and TV actor herself, in the presence of Asif.

“Yes I divorced her when I realised that Veena was not mending her ways and started having an affair with Asif,” he said.

Controversies are not new to Asif. He is currently serving a ban from playing international cricket following his detention at the Dubai Airport for 19 days for carrying a banned substance, opium.

Earlier, days before the ICC Champions Trophy 2006, he along with Shoaib Akhtar tested positive for a banned anabolic steroid nandrolone.

While Akhtar was barred for two years from playing international cricket, Asif was slapped with a year’s suspension.

Asif has also been banned by the Indian Premiere League (IPL) on charges of taking performance enhancement drugs during the league’s first season. (ANI)

PCB committee likely to slap hefty fine on Mohammad Asif

Lahore, Mar.26 (ANI): Banned Pakistani fast bowler Mohammad Asif may be slapped with a hefty fine for not producing relevant immigration documents before a special committee looking into his Dubai detention case.

According to The Nation, Asif told a Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) committee that he was not facing any ban to enter Dubai, on which the committee asked for the relevant documents which he has not tabled before it as yet.

Asif was asked for the documents, as a visa is not considered a proper proof of clearance for entering the United Arab of Emirates (UAE). ]

The special committee is planning to slap a hefty fine on the drug abused bowler, if he does not produce the documents in the next two to three days, sources said.

Asif, 25, was held at Dubai airport June last year while returning home from in India, and charged with possessing a small amount of opium. (ANI)

PCB slaps Mohammad Asif with 6.6 million rupee bill for Dubai expenditure

Lahore, Mar.21 (ANI): Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Asif’s tribulations seem to be far from over as the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has asked him to pay 6.6 million rupees for the money spent on him during his detention in Dubai.

According to the Dawn newspaper, the PCB claims that it paid 5.7 million rupees to a Dubai based lawyer to help the disgraced bowler when he was detained by Dubai airport officials on charges of carrying a banned substance.

Furthermore, the PCB said that the then Director Human Resources, Nadeem Akram was sent to Dubai. Nadeem was paid an amount of 350,000 rupees as daily allowance for his Dubai stay.300, 000 rupees was also paid to the PCB lawyer Taffazzul Hussain Rizvi.

Asif, however, has refused to pay the PCB bill saying that how come the board appointed lawyer before the case was heard in a court of law.

The 25-year-old fast bowler was held at Dubai airport June last year while returning home from in India, and charged with possessing a small amount of opium. He tried to avoid the large number of media waiting for him outside Jinnah terminal and opted not to come out of the lounge. (ANI)

Male officers not allowed to frisk women: Supreme Court

New Delhi, March 15 (ANI): The Supreme Court has held that male officers cannot frisk women for the purpose of confiscating contraband materials like narcotics, as it is illegal.

The Court stated, during hearing of a case related to confiscation of narcotics, that any personal search of a woman by male officers amounts to violation of Sub-section 4 of Section 50 of the Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Act.

Making observations in a case a three-judge Bench comprising Justice S.B. Sinha, Justice Mukundakam Sharma and Justice H. L. Dattu observed, “Personal search of the accused was conducted by DSP Baldev Singh which as indicated herein before was violative of the provisions of Sub-section 4 of Section 50 of the Act,” a three-judge bench of Justices S B Sinha, Mukundakam Sharma and H L Dattu observed.

Search of women, if any, can be conducted only by women personnel, the apex court said.

The bench passed the ruling while dismissing an appeal filed by Punjab Government challenging the acquittal order passed by the Punjab and Haryana High Court in favour of an old lady Gurnam Kaur and her daughters-in law- Ranjit Kaur and Gurjit Kaur.

A sessions court had convicted the trio for possessing narcotic substances and sentenced them to 12 years rigorous imprisonment.

However, on an appeal the High Court acquitted the accused on the ground that there were several infirmities in the prosecution’s case, besides holding as illegal the search of the women by male officers.

The State then filed an appeal in the apex court.

The three women were arrested by the police, who claimed that they recovered heroin and opium from their house at Thatha village in Amritsar district and DSP Baldev Singh claimed to have personally conducted the search of the trio. (ANI)

ROUNDUP: Bolivian president defends, chews coca leaf at UN drug meet

Vienna – Bolivian President Evo Morales on Wednesday chewed a coca leaf at a United Nations drug conference in Vienna, underscoring his view that the plant should not be on the UN list of narcotic substances.

Morales was speaking at a conference of the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, which is expected to adopt an action plan Thursday to tackle the global drug problem in the coming decade, against the backdrop of limited progress over the last 10 years.

“It’s not a drug, it’s a medicine,” the president said, holding up a coca leaf, which he put into his mouth minutes later.

The leaves should be removed from the international list of narcotic substances, while forms of cocaine should be included instead, Morales told reporters.

Under the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, coca leaf chewing should have been banned by 1989 in all countries.

While Bolivia would continue to limit coca plant farming, Morales also said that the traditional plant “represents the culture of peoples in the Andean region” and has been used for 5,000 years, to treat ailments such as altitude sickness.

Bolivia’s president, who comes from an indigenous family, drew comparisons between himself and Barack Obama, the first black president of the United States, expressing hope that Obama would help decriminalize the coca leaf and would help end the zero-production policy.

The action plan to be adopted in Vienna calls on countries to find a better balance between measures to curb supply and demand, for example by strengthening health care services.

UN goals adopted in 1998 to significantly reduce drug supply and demand by 2008 “have been attained only to a limited extent,” the draft of the action plan said.

Taking a larger view of history, the head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC) noted Wednesday that there had been large improvements since 1909, when he first international conference to control drugs met in Shanghai.

Since then opium production has fallen by 75 per cent, UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa said.

On Tuesday, the European Commission issued a report that painted a bleak picture of global drug policy, saying it had “no more than a marginal positive influence” in the past decade, as drug prices fell and opium production grew.

One of the sticking points regarding the action plan is whether to include measures for so-called harm reduction, such as providing substitution drugs or needles to addicts. While non-governmental groups support the concept, most UN members are opposed, diplomats said. (dpa)