Afghan opium trade has India worriedTIMES NEWS NETWORK< FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 2004 11:59:55 PM >
NEW DELHI: The failure of the US to put an end to the reign of druglords in Afghanistan may cost India dearly. The sharp increase in opium cultivation in Afghanistan by a whopping 60% over the last one year is giving sleepless nights to Indian drug enforcement agencies.
The concern stems from the fact that most of the consignments of heroin seized in India in recent months originated in the war-ravaged Afghanistan and found their way into the country though the Indo-Pak border along Punjab.
"It's an alarming situation since we think the drug peddlers and mafia operating along the Afghanistan-Pakistan route may try to offload more contraband into India in the wake of a bumper harvest," said an official of the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence.
Opium production in Afghanistan was encouraged by the Taliban regime and its mentors in the ISI. The failure of the US to establish its grip over the entire country, with Taliban remnants continuing to call shorts over vast patches, has allowed the drug syndicates to carry on with their lucrative trade.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/970601.cmsThat's not exactly true, as the Taliban virtually eradicated opium production before the invasion. Now, about Pakistan's ISI:Role of ISI questioned in Senate By Amir Wasim
ISLAMABAD, Nov 30: The opposition on Tuesday questioned the "unlimited powers and political role" of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) while ministers and members of the ruling coalition tried to defend the working of the military's intelligence agency.
Speaking on a motion moved by the opposition to discuss the recruitment policy of the ISI, People's Party Parliamentarians (PPP) Senator Farhatullah Babar said the ISI had become a "state within state" and the time had come to review its charter and to evolve a mechanism to monitor its activities.
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"If this is not a state within state, what else is it," he asked. The PPP senator recalled hearings in the US Senate in March 2003 and said Republican Senator Dana Rohrabacher had asked
"How would you characterize ISI's involvement in opium business on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border over the last six years" and in reply a former US ambassador termed this involvement "substantial". He said the intelligence agencies were also accused of involvement in sectarian violence in the country. He read out excerpts from a report of the Pakistan's Senate Standing Committee for Religious Affairs' of September 26, 1994.
http://www.dawn.com/2004/12/01/top2.htm