Golden Crescent
- "Golden Crescent" may also refer to the Victoria, Texas metropolitan area
The Golden Crescent is the name given to one of Asia's two principal areas of illicit opium production (with the other being the Golden Triangle), located at the crossroads of Central, South, and Western Asia. This space overlaps three nations, Afghanistan, Iran, and Pakistan, whose mountainous peripheries define the crescent.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) heroin production estimates for the past 10 years show significant changes in the primary source areas. Heroin production in Southeast Asia declined dramatically, while heroin production in Southwest Asia expanded.[1] In 1991, Afghanistan became the world's primary opium producer, with a yield of 1,782 metric tons (U.S. State Department estimates), surpassing Myanmar, formerly the world leader in opium production. The decrease in heroin production from Myanmar is the result of several years of unfavorable growing conditions and new government policies of forced eradication.[1] Afghan heroin production increased during the same time frame, with a notable decrease in 2001 allegedly as a result of the Taliban's fatwa against heroin production.[1] Afghanistan now produces over 90% of the world's non-pharmaceutical-grade opium.[1][2] In addition to opiates, Afghanistan is also the world's largest producer of hashish.[3][4]
History
The Golden Crescent has a much longer history of opium production than does Southeast Asia's Golden Triangle. The Golden Triangle emerged as a modern-day opium-producing entity only in the 1980s, after the Golden Crescent did so in the 1950s. The Golden Triangle began making an impact on the opium and morphine market in the 1980s and has steadily increased its output since then in order to match the increasing demand. During the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, a retaliation to the September 11th terrorist attacks, the Golden Crescent’s opium production took a huge hit, producing almost 90% less opium than in 2000.[5]
At the peak of its opium production in 2007, the Golden Crescent produced more than 8,000 of the world’s almost 9,000 total tons of opium, a near monopoly.[5] The Golden Crescent also dominates the cannabis resin market due to the high resin yields of the region (145 kg/ha), four times more than Morocco (36 kg/ha).[6] The Golden Crescent also caters to a much larger market, about 64% more than the Golden Triangle. It produces and distributes over 2,500 tons of opiates to Africa, Europe, the Americas and Central Asia and supplies almost 9.5 million opiate users worldwide.
Despite worldwide efforts to capture and seize as much opium product as possible, total opiate seizures only brought in 23.5% of the total estimated product distributed worldwide.[5] Of these seizures around 97% of opium and morphine seizures are made in the Middle East and heroin seizures are made mostly in the Middle East or Europe. In Afghanistan only one percent of the heroin that is exported illegally is intercepted and destroyed by the national governments. Although Afghanistan is the major producer of opiates in the Golden Crescent, most of the seizures are made in Iran, their neighbor to the west. This is because traffickers are arrested while crossing the border from Afghanistan to Iran so that they can distribute the product to Europe and Africa where there is a high demand for opiates. In Pakistan the majority of traffickers arrested are 38 percent Nigerians and 32 percent Pakistanis.[5]
These traffickers, essential to the transportation of the drugs from the source to end-user markets, make large profits because of how risky the job is. A rough estimate of how many people are currently involved in drug trafficking is above one million. The majority of opium produced in Afghanistan comes from the Kandahar and Helmand provinces, Helmand being the major producer. Of the 5,300 tons of opium produced in Afghanistan, 2,700 tons is transformed into heroin.[5] In 2008, almost half of the heroin produced was used in Iran. Even though Afghanistan is the leading producer, only 7% was used there.
Markets
Although the Golden Triangle heroin dominates the Asian illegal drug markets, the Golden Crescent is increasingly becoming a source of illicit drugs trafficked into western China, particularly the nearby Xinjiang Province.[1]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Interpol: Drugs Sub-Directorate: Heroin". Interpol. 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-05.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-03-25. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-05-30. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
- ↑ "UN: Afghanistan is leading hashish producer". Fox News. 2010-03-31.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Drug Trafficking". United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
- ↑ "Afghanistan is Leading Hashish Producer". Fox News. Retrieved 21 May 2012.
External links
- Video documentary of golden crescent
- Geopium: Geopolitics of Illicit Drugs in Asia
- UN Report: Afghanistan’s Drug Industry (PDF, 223 pages)
- Afghanistan: Drug Industry and Counter-Narcotics Policy, World Bank
- United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime
- United States Department of State