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Taliban looks to secure cash flow by continuing Afghanistan’s lucrative drug trade: Experts

Tue, 31 Aug 2021   |  Reading Time: 2 minutes

Kabul [Afghanistan], August 31 (ANI): After the takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban, the group is looking to sustain the new regime by securing its cash flow through the lucrative drug trade.

Rachel Brooks, writing in The Epoch Times said that the analysts believe that the country’s already bustling drug trade will continue to grow under the Taliban as the group is poised to take control of the country’s billion-dollar opium and heroin trade.

Afghanistan is the world’s largest illicit opiate supplier, with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimating the country accounts for 80 per cent of global opium and heroin supply.

Since taking power in Kabul, the group has indicated it will move to ban the drug trade. But the Taliban looks to secure cash flow to sustain a new regime.

The Taliban has leveraged the illicit opium and heroin trade for its own economic gain since the group formed and rose to power in the early-to-mid 1990s.

“The Taliban considers themselves devout Muslims. But, when it comes to cultivating and exporting opium, they don’t have an issue,” said Terry Blevins, the chief executive officer of ARMAPLEX Security and a former police sergeant.

While the terrorist group has changed its narrative around its narcotics trade in the past, it has remained consistent in using the drugs to fund its operations, according to Jason Li, a research associate with the East Asia Program at the Stimson Center.

Estimates of the Taliban’s annual revenue from drug trade range from the tens of millions up to USD 400 million, according to one UN report, which the group earns from levying taxes on opium production, heroin labs, and drug traffickers, reported The Epoch Times.

A 2018 Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) report said that illicit narcotics account for 60 per cent of the Taliban’s annual revenue, says Brooks.

“The illicit opiate trade out of Afghanistan will likely continue–under covert and less official auspices. Illicit production was not curbed under the US-supported Ghani regime,” Li said, referring to the former Afghanistan government that crumbled when President Ashraf Ghani deserted Kabul.

Li pointed out that, according to UNODC, profits from opium and heroin have grown in recent years. “That has important implications for how the Taliban will frame its stance on illicit drug flows in search of international recognition,” he added.

While the Taliban risks strong global backlash if it supports illicit drug trading, analysts expect an uptick in production as the group looks to secure sources of funding, says Brooks. (ANI)



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POST COMMENTS (1)

BHAVIL

Aug 31, 2021
Well people might be thinking that how much can they earn from it. 1 Kg of heroin costs arounf 5k-7k USD and people from all over the world will order in huge numbers. There is report which consisted of a survey which found out that people in america and most of the european countries do drugs atleast once in 5 days. Being a developed country and so called civilized nations they must not but sadly they do it. Well lets analyse our own neighbour, in pakistan drugs consumption went up exponentially in 1996-2001 during the taliban reign. Most of the drug consumers where above the age 35 but a significatn portion was still youth. In india also border states like punjab, rajashtan and specially kashmir can be a epicentre of drugs and might give the air for terrorism sponsured by pakistan to breath again. Tough times ahead for pakistan and india if this happens and china might do that in notheastern areas also.

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