Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Afghan Farmers Switch from Poppies to Wheat

Apparently, high food costs and a fall in the price of heroin have made opium poppies a less attractive agricultural crop.
Afghan farmers hope to capitalise on soaring food costs by growing wheat instead of poppy crops, with the fall in heroin prices further fuelling the switch.

The price of a tonne of wheat in Afghanistan has almost trebled this year, causing acute food shortages. A changeover of crops has begun in key agricultural regions, said Tekeste Tekie, country representative for the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation.

He said a significant increase in wheat crops is expected from next year's harvest. "The high price of commodities has encouraged farmers to switch from poppy cultivation to wheat. In fact, we are already seeing evidence of this happening, for instance in the Bamian region, where some farmers have planted half wheat and half poppy crops," Tekie said.
Frankly, I question whether the reporting in this story is representative of the whole poppy-growing farm population.

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