Drug Mafia, CIA Blamed for Sacking of Afghan
Governor |
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In
a country flooded with narcotics traffickers and corrupt government
officials, one of Afghanistan’s few remaining "clean" governors,
Mohammed Daud, has been removed from his position, and many are blaming
the drug mafia and the CIA for his abrupt dismissal.
Daud was appointed at the request of the
British government in order to oversee Helmand province, the country’s
largest opium producing region. The former governor of Helmand, Sher
Muhammad Akhunzada, whom Daud replaced earlier this year, has been
widely implicated in the drug trade.
Contrary to Akhunzada, “British
officials regarded Mr. Daud as the cleanest governor in Afghanistan
and hoped that his extensive experience in development would help to
win over Helmand’s population,” The Times
reported.
Last month, however, the British
government
expressed frustration with the effort, pointing to the fact that
Afghan President Hamid Karzai continued to meet with the former
governor, Akhunzada. Adding further strain on the situation, Karzai
appointed Akhunzada as a Senator and made his brother, Amir Muhammad
Akhunzada, Daud's deputy.
"The president is undermining his own
governor," one British official
told The Times. "It doesn’t help what we’re trying to do."
It would appear U.S. officials,
particularly from the Central Intelligence Agency, were influencing
Karzai’s actions, undercutting the efforts of their British
counterparts. Moreover, as The Independent reported, “British
sources have blamed pressure from the CIA for President Hamid Karzai's
decision to dismiss Mohammed Daud as governor".
“The Americans knew Daud was a main
British ally,” one official
explained to The Independent, “yet they deliberately
undermined him and told Karzai to sack him.” The U.S. apparently
favors the brother of Daud's predecessor and purported drug lord, Amir
Muhammad Akhunzada.
As The Times
reports, “British officials fear that Mr. Daud will be replaced by
his deputy, Amir Muhammad Akhunzada, the brother of Sher Muhammad
Akhunzada. He is thought to have links to the drug trade and has been
banned from running in elections because he refuses to disband his
personal militia.”
“For the moment,” as one official told
The Times, “before a new governor is named, the governor of
Helmand is a drug-dealing warlord who was banned from the elections by
the UN for keeping a militia and his connection to narcotics, and with
whom the British have said they cannot work. Nice.” Opium from Afghanistan provides more than 90% of the world’s total supply, funding international drug syndicates with billions of dollars in profits every year.
According to a recent
report issued by the United Nations and the World Bank, the
U.S.-installed government has established a “complex pyramid of
protection and patronage, effectively providing state protection to
criminal trafficking activities.”
“Around 25 to 30 key traffickers, the
majority of them based in southern Afghanistan, control major
transactions and transfers, working closely with sponsors in top
government and political positions,” the report states.
“This year's record harvest of 6,100
tons of opium will generate more than $3 billion in illicit revenue --
equivalent to almost half of Afghanistan's GDP,” writes
Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime. “Profits for drug traffickers downstream,”
he notes, “will be almost 20 times that amount.” As The Washington Post has plainly summarized, “corruption and alliances formed by Washington and the Afghan government with anti-Taliban tribal chieftains, some of whom are believed to be deeply involved in the trade, [have] undercut the [counter-narcotics] effort.”
Devlin Buckley is a freelance writer and journalist residing in Troy, New York. He's the editor of the American Monitor , and can be reached at: PDevlinBuckley@yahoo.com.
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