Opium growing has
increased in Burma for a sixth year running despite eradication efforts, a UN
report says.
The
UN Office on Drugs and Crime said land used for opium had risen by 17% this
year, from nearly 40,000 hectares (100,000 acres) to 51,000 hectares.
Burma
is the second largest opium grower in the world after Afghanistan.
Almost
all of the opium it produces is grown in Shan and Kachin states, which have
seen longstanding conflict between the military and ethnic rebel groups.
'Toxic combination'
Citing
figures from the Burmese government, the report said almost 24,000 hectares of
poppy fields had been eradicated in 2012 - about four times the figure in 2011.
Gary
Lewis, UNODC representative in South East Asia, said the situation on the
ground was "very complex". In areas where opium was grown, there was
''a toxic combination of guns, money and drugs'', he said.
The
army and rebel fighters often profit from allowing the trade to continue.
Farmers, meanwhile, say the instability means they have little choice but to
continue growing the lucrative poppy plant - which is used to make heroin.
Burma
accounts for 25% of opium grown in the world, while Laos accounts for 3%, said
the report, entitled the South East Asia Opium Survey 2012.
In
Laos, land used to grow opium increased almost four-fold between 2007 and 2012
to 6,300 hectares.
The
recent rise contrasts with the situation from 1998 to 2006, when both Burma and
Laos saw big drops - with an 83% reduction in the case of Burma.
Most
of Burma's opium is refined into heroin - about half goes to meet the growing
market in China, with the rest being sold across South East Asia.
Part
of the reason for the sustained growth in the cultivation of this crop is the
demand for heroin in Asia, said the report.
But
the good news, in the case of Burma, was that there was now ''momentum to find
the solution'', Mr Lewis said.
There
is support from President Thein Sein's government, which has embarked on a
series of reforms.
Ceasefires
and political opening up also meant that international organisations such as
the UN now have better access to the areas.
The
Golden Triangle - where Burma, Thailand and Laos meet - has been notorious for
opium and drug smuggling for decades.
Reference:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20150082
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