16/7/2004
Laos Reduces Opium Poppy Cultivation By Half
Opium cultivation in Laos fell by 45 per cent this year. If
this continues alongside a similar decline in Myanmar, it could
mean the end of more than 100 years of opium production in the
Golden Triangle.
The
drop in 2003 translates into a cumulative decline of 75 per
cent since 1998, according to
the "Laos Opium Survey" carried
out by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the Government
of Laos.
The
survey also reveals that the average farm-gate price of opium
has increased by 27 per cent compared with the previous
season. The increase reflects the scarcity of opium produced
this season and could present an incentive for farmers to cultivate
opium next year.
UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa called on the international
community to help farmers in Laos, who are now giving up their
income from opium, with sustainable alternative sources of livelihood.
"In
many areas, opium elimination has been achieved without farmers
having the opportunity to
develop other sources of income.
Although the opium growers in fact never derived a great deal
from this crop, the cash from selling opium was important for
farmers living on, or below, the poverty line," he said.
For opium-growing households in Laos, the average annual gross
domestic product per capita is $62 compared with $309 per capita
for the country as a whole.