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[Marxism] NYT: No Blowing Smoke: Poppies Fade in Southeast Asia
- To: "'Activists and scholars in Marxist tradition'" <marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [Marxism] NYT: No Blowing Smoke: Poppies Fade in Southeast Asia
- From: "Walter Lippmann" <walterlx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 16 Sep 2007 07:59:30 -0700
- Thread-index: Acf4U++wVu+xpJvTQOe+kZjNXgGKIQ==
During my days as a child-protective services social worker here in
Los Angeles I observed the terribly destructive toll which narcotics
and alcohol wrought among poor and working class peoples. One of my
regular jobs was to detain and place the children of addicted mothers
in foster care. Some of the moms passed on to their children some of
the "fringe benefits" of their addictions, like HIV/AIDS. Washington
approaches these as law-and-order problems, criminalizing the victims.
They ought to be understood to have medical and psycho-social problems
but in Los Angeles we're even hearing of cigaret-smoking being banned
from public parks and beaches! While drug addition is a profound curse
on modern society, by no means are all of the laws on the books to be
instantly-removed. People who drink, use drugs, or otherwise impair
their judgement and then operate a motor vehicle, which is itself a
lethal weapon, are a danger to themselves and others, and must surely
be reined in and inspired to change their behavior. Many people have
all sorts of self-destructive problems and maladaptive ways of coping
with the stresses of modern life. It's one thing, and it's bad enough
to harm ourselves, but when we become a danger to our children, our
friends, our families and to others, "individual freedom" stops being
longer involved.
Drink is the curse of the working class, it's been eloquently argued.
While every now and then I take a nip or a glass of wine or a bottle
of beer, habitual substance abuse has become quite a social phenomenon.
Under capitalism, addiction to shopping is being very strongly promoted.
Perhaps the most pernicious influence most of us are under isn't illegal
at all: it's television, which promotes feelings of inadequacy in all
of us. Psychologist Harriet Lerner pointed out not long ago that:
"Our society doesn't promote self acceptance and it never will.
First of all, self-acceptance doesn't sell products. Capitalism would
fall if we liked ourselves the way we are now. Also, people who feel
shamed and inadequate themselves tend to pass it on. I'm sure
you've noticed that many individuals and groups try to enhance
their self-esteem by diminishing others." from her 2004 anthology,
--- "Fear and Other Uninvited Guests" (2004)
Such influence is certainly felt in revolutionary societies such as
Cuba's where the government has acknowledged alcoholism as a problem
(you can find AA offices dotted around the island in which people who
abuse alcohol struggle to address their demons. Yes, some Cubans also
are addicted to other drugs, both prescription and others, and also to
consumerism and shopping. The island isn't an isolated utopia, immune
to the social and cultural influences of the broader world.
Walter Lippmann
Los Angeles, California
======================================================================
The First Opium War or the First Anglo-Chinese War was fought between
the British East India Company and the Qing Dynasty in China from
1839 to 1842 with the aim of forcing China to import British opium.
It is often seen as the beginning of European imperial hegemony
toward China. The conflict deepened Chinese suspicion of Western
society, which still lingers today in East Asia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Opium_War
======================================================================
September 16, 2007
The World
No Blowing Smoke: Poppies Fade in Southeast Asia
By THOMAS FULLER
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/16/weekinreview/16fuller.html
THE enduring image of Southeast Asia's Golden Triangle is of brightly
colored poppy fields, opium-smoking hill tribes and heroin labs
hidden in the jungle.
But the reality is that after years of producing the lion's share of
the world's opium, the Golden Triangle is now only a bit player in
the global heroin trade.
"The mystique may remain, and the geography will be celebrated in the
future by novelists," said Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of
the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. "But from our vantage
point, we see a region that is rapidly moving toward an opium-free
status."
The decline of the Golden Triangle is a major, if little noticed,
milestone in the war on drugs. The question now is whether that
success can be sustained.
Three decades ago, the northernmost reaches of Laos, Thailand and
Myanmar produced more than 70 percent of all the opium sold
worldwide, most of which was refined into heroin. Today the area
produces about 5 percent of the world total, says Mr. Costa's agency.
What happened?
Economic pressure from China, crackdowns on opium farmers , and a
switch by criminal syndicates to methamphetamine production, appear
to have had the biggest impact. At the same time, some insurgent
groups that once were financed with drug money now say they are
urging farmers to eradicate their poppy fields.
As a result, the Golden Triangle has been eclipsed by the Golden
Crescent - the poppy-growing area in and around Afghanistan that is
now the source of an estimated 92 percent of the world's opium,
according to the United Nations.
Much of the growth in opium production there is in areas controlled
by the Taliban, which United States officials say uses revenue from
opium and heroin to finance itself. This shift to Afghanistan has had
major consequences for the global heroin market: a near doubling of
opium production worldwide in less than two decades. Poppies grown in
the fertile valleys of southern Afghanistan yield on average four
times more opium than those grown in upland Southeast Asia.
A striking aspect of the decline of the Golden Triangle is the role
China has played in pressing opium-growing regions to eradicate poppy
crops. A major market for Golden Triangle heroin, China has seen a
spike in addicts and H.I.V. infections from contaminated needles.
The area of Myanmar along the Chinese border, which once produced
about 30 percent of the country's opium, was declared opium-free last
year by the United Nations. Local authorities, who are from the Wa
tribe and are autonomous from Myanmar's central government, have
banned poppy cultivation and welcomed Chinese investment in rubber,
sugar cane and tea plantations, casinos and other businesses.
"China has had an underestimated role," said Martin Jelsma, a Dutch
researcher who has written extensively on the illicit drug trade in
Asia.
"Their main leverage is economic: These border areas of Burma are
by now economically much more connected to China than the rest of
Burma," he said, using the former name for Myanmar. "For local
authorities it's quite clear that, for any investments they want
to attract, cooperation with China is a necessity."
Myanmar remains the world's second-leading source of opium but is a
distant second; its production declined by 80 percent over the last
decade.
Insurgents have long used opium to help finance civil wars in the
Golden Triangle. But some are now working to destroy the crop. At
least one faction of the Shan State Army, a group that long had ties
to the heroin business, says it is leading eradication efforts.
Kon Jern, a military commander for the group, which is based along
Myanmar's border with northern Thailand, says he is cracking down
because government militias and corrupt officials profit from opium.
"They sell the drugs, they buy weapons, and they use those weapons to
attack us," he said.
The United Nations credits Myanmar's central government with leading
the eradication effort in Shan areas. In Laos, where the political
situation is more stable, the government began a crackdown in the
1990s to increase its international credibility and because officials
realized their own children were at risk, said Leik Boonwaat, the
representative in Laos for the U.N.'s Office on Drugs and Crime. Laos
finally outlawed opium in 1996.
The government, Mr. Boonwaat said, also saw that opium did little to
help poor farmers who grew poppies. "It's mostly the organized crime
syndicates that made most of the profits," he said.
The amount of land cultivated in Laos for opium has fallen 94 percent
since 1998. The country now produces so little opium that it may now
be a net importer of the drug, the United Nations says.
Yet experts warn that the reductions may not hold unless farmers
develop other ways to make a living.
Pierre-Arnaud Chouvy, an opium specialist at the National Center for
Scientific Research in Paris, says it took Thailand 30 years to wean
opium farmers from poppy production, a transition led by the Thai
royal family, which encouraged opium-growing hill tribes to use their
cooler climate to produce coffee, macadamia nuts and green
vegetables.
But, he said, "In Laos and Burma, we've had a very quick decrease."
He asked, "Is it going to last?"
Four years ago farmers in Banna Sala, an isolated Laotian hamlet of
several hundred ethnic Hmong, grew opium poppies with impunity. No
longer. And some farmers are angry.
"They stopped me from growing opium, so I don't have money to send my
children to school," said one villager, Jeryeh Singya, 34, who has
seven children. She once bartered the opium she grew for soap, salt
and clothing. "If they let me grow it I would," she said.
Mr. Kon, the rebel commander in Myanmar, says farmers are finding it
difficult to switch crops. "If they change and grow other kinds of
plants nobody comes to buy their products - the transportation is not
good," he said.
Experts say that to stay free of opium, isolated villages that
depended on it will need assistance and investment for better roads,
schools and clinics.
But Myanmar, which is run by a military junta, poses a dilemma for
Western countries. The United States has an embargo on trade with
Myanmar. The European Union has suspended trade privileges and
defense cooperation, limiting its aid to humanitarian assistance.
"This policy of boycott and isolation has, of course, meant that only
very little development aid and humanitarian assistance is flowing
into the country," said Mr. Jelsma, the Dutch expert on drugs. "That
makes the chances of the sustainability of this decline very
questionable."
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