CAIRO,
February 26, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Afghan farmers are accusing
the US forces of secretly dusting their lands with chemicals, killing
crops and animals and causing serious health problems for the
population, a leading US newspaper reported Sunday, February 26.
Villagers
in the remote mountain area of Kanai in Helmand Province and at least
two other villages said that the American forces, controlling the
skies of the war-ravaged country, were responsible for the nighttime
aerial spraying, said The New York Times.
“They
are the ones with the planes,” said Abdul Ahmad who lost, together
with his brother Abdullah, 200 animals from symptoms that suggested
poisoning.
Abdullah
told the American daily that one night in early February he was
watching over his animals when suddenly a plane flew overhead three
times.
In
the morning, the animals “went mad, their eyes went blue and they
could not eat,” said his brother Abdul Ahmad.
“Water
was coming from their mouths, they were trying to eat their droppings
and they were shivering,” he added.
The
February 3 incident also left villagers, particularly children,
complaining of fevers, skin rashes and bloody diarrhea.
A
week later, the crops - wheat, vegetables and poppies - were dying.
Deception
The
villagers also lashed out at President Hamid Karzai who had pledged to
help farmers who drop the cultivation of poppy, but backed down on
his promises.
“We
gave our vote to Karzai so he would bring us help and now he is
killing our animals,” Abdul Ahmad said angrily.
Similar
sentiments were echoed by other farmers.
“Karzai
lied to us,” charged Ahmadullah, accusing the president of failing
his people.
“He
said, 'We will give you assistance,' and he didn't. So we grew poppy
to be able to feed our families. Then the president ordered it
destroyed and so we destroyed it. And now he is destroying our wheat.
What will be left of our lives?”
Last
November, a UN report warned that Afghanistan is facing the threat of
being a corrupt “narco-state” after the opium production rose by
two thirds in 2004.
Denial
Both
the American embassy in Kabul and the Afghan government, however,
denied any involvement in any spraying.
“There
is no credible evidence that aerial spraying has taken place in
Helmand,” the Embassy said in a statement.
“No
agency, personnel or contractors associated with the United States
government have conducted or been involved in any such activity in
Helmand or any other province of Afghanistan.”
Lt.
Gen. Muhammad Daoud, Afghan deputy interior minister for
counter-narcotics, said no evidence of aerial spraying was found in
the area.
He
attributed the death of the animals and crops to “a naturally
occurring disease”.
Afghanistan's
booming poppy crop has been an intensifying concern to both the US and
Britain.
Last
December, the Bush administration forwarded a budget request to
Congress for 152 million US dollars for aerial spraying as part of a
$776 million aid package for counter-narcotics operations in
Afghanistan for 2005.
The
request was later dropped over Karzai’s strong opposition.
World
groups, led by CARE International, warned in an open letter to US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on January 31 against widespread
eradication of poppy in Afghanistan.
“Widespread
eradication in 2005 could undermine the economy and devastate already
poor families without giving rural development projects sufficient
time to provide alternative sources of income.”