Prohibition on Opium Poppy Cultivation in Afghanistan:

A Case Study of Taliban Ban

Authors

  • Taimur Azam Khan Research Fellow, Hanns Seidel Foundation (HSF) Islamabad and Assistant (Research & Publications), Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Judiciary Academy Peshawar, Pakistan.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54418/ca-91.182

Keywords:

Afghanistan, Opium Economy, Pakistan, Prohibition, SAARC, Security Implications.

Abstract

Afghanistan is home to the largest illicit drug industry in the world. The depth, influence, and impact of its narco-economy remain unparalleled. Illicit drug production has become a dominant feature of Afghanistan’s landscape. The opium economy is pervasive and deeply entrenched. Afghanistan's opium economy has become the source of security rather than the state. Therefore, the degree of dependence on the opium economy has thus become unprecedented in the modern history of drug production. The dependence means any immediate attempt toward opium poppy prohibition/eradication will result in political and socioeconomic crises not only in Afghanistan but the transit states in the region as well. In context of narco-economy, this paper expostulate that the construction of security in traditional and nontraditional discourse are linear, i.e. detached from reality or suffers from moralistic constraint, and therefore, needs to be revisited in line with ground reality of Afghanistan and transit states at large. Deviating from conventional literature on drug-security nexus, the paper argues that a complete prohibition of poppy cultivation in Afghanistan is by far a larger security concern than its retention. This research paper, therefore, takes a cursory examination of the security implications and challenges that may ensue as a result of a diminished production capacity of Afghanistan’s opium economy either experienced through complete prohibition, eradication programs or through natural calamity.

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Published

2023-01-20

How to Cite

Khan , T. A. (2023). Prohibition on Opium Poppy Cultivation in Afghanistan: : A Case Study of Taliban Ban. Central Asia, 91(Winter), 67–87. https://doi.org/10.54418/ca-91.182