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The Narco-State.


The Christian Science Christian Science, religion founded upon principles of divine healing and laws expressed in the acts and sayings of Jesus, as discovered and set forth by Mary Baker Eddy and practiced by the Church of Christ, Scientist.  Monitor on June 13 quoted an Afghan regional police commander it called "Ahmed Noor" as bragging about the fact that he was a drug trafficker Noun 1. drug trafficker - an unlicensed dealer in illegal drugs
drug dealer, drug peddler, peddler, pusher

criminal, crook, felon, malefactor, outlaw - someone who has committed a crime or has been legally convicted of a crime
. The paper said: "The Afghan police chief doesn't realize his voice is being taped. So pardon pardon, in law, exemption from punishment for a criminal conviction granted by the grace of the executive of a government. A general pardon to a class of persons guilty of the same offense (e.g., insurrection) is an amnesty.  him if he brags about his life as a drug trafficker. In a friendly conversation recorded in his home last summer, he tells of his quarrels with another drug-dealing police commander in the country's northern Takhar Province; about driving through a rival's police checkpoint (programming) checkpoint - Saving the current state of a program and its data, including intermediate results, to disk or other non-volatile storage, so that if interrupted the program could be restarted at the point at which the last checkpoint occurred.  with 500 kilos of heroin heroin (hĕ`rəwən), opiate drug synthesized from morphine (see narcotic). Originally produced in 1874, it was thought to be not only nonaddictive but useful as a cure for respiratory illness and morphine addiction, and capable of relieving  in his car; and his adventures in rescuing three heroin-smuggling friends from the clutches of Tajik policemen. It's just another part of the job, he says.

Then the Monitor quoted "Ahmed Noor" as saying: "If my adventure were filmed, it would be a very exciting movie". The paper said: "On the tape, he laughs. 'The UN should give me an award'. But on one point the former mujahideen mujahideen
 Arabic mujahidun (“those engaged in jihad”)

In its broadest sense, those Muslims who proclaim themselves warriors for the faith. Its Arabic singular, mujahid, was not an uncommon personal name from the early Islamic period onward.
 commander is certain: 'Even if all the world were to come to Afghanistan, they will not be able to stop smuggling'. In relative terms, Mr. Noor is a small player in an illegal business that generates $2.7 billion a year, more than half the value of the country's legal economy. Afghan officials and foreign diplomats Some famous diplomats include: Afghanistan
  • Abdullah Abdullah
Algeria
  • Abdelaziz Bouteflika
  • Mohamed Seddik Benyahia
  • Lakhdar Brahimi
Argentina
  • Carlos Saavedra Lamas
Australia
  • Richard Alston
 increasingly call this central Asian country Noun 1. Asian country - any one of the nations occupying the Asian continent
Asian nation

country, land, state - the territory occupied by a nation; "he returned to the land of his birth"; "he visited several European countries"
 a 'narco-state', as top officials find it more profitable to flout flout  
v. flout·ed, flout·ing, flouts

v.tr.
To show contempt for; scorn: flout a law; behavior that flouted convention. See Usage Note at flaunt.

v.intr.
 laws than enforce them.

"Very few major Afghan officials have been removed for involvement in drug trafficking, in part because of the lack of evidence, and in part because the country has only recently created special tribunals to handle major drug cases. For this reason, the Monitor launched its own investigation in a province known for trafficking, to see how prevalent the drug trade is among police chiefs and what evidence could be found.

"Sending an investigative unit with a hidden minidisk recorder to the northern province of Takhar - where Afghanistan's medium and low-grade heroin is trafficked into Tajikistan, and on toward Europe - the Monitor recorded four police commanders. All of the names in this story have been changed. The Monitor deemed it too dangerous for our investigators to confront each of these commanders with the taped evidence, and too unfair to their reputations to release their names without giving them a chance to defend themselves. But the statements in these tapes - gathered by investigators who have excellent reputations collecting testimony for the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission The Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) (Dari: کمیسیون مستقل حقوق بشر افغانستان, Pashto: , among others - provide a rare inside view of how drug corruption has trickled down to the front lines in the country's faltering war on drugs.

Commander Dost: "'Commander Dost' is commander of a border police unit that patrols a large swath of the border with Tajikistan. In his taped conversation, Dost reveals how widespread the drug trade has become, as police commanders compete with each other to dominate the drug trade in Takhar Province. 'For one year I did the smuggling', he says, on the lawn of his home. 'It was not hidden from anybody. It was obvious to everybody. I put my RPG (Report Program Generator) One of the first program generators designed for business reports, introduced in 1964 by IBM. In 1970, RPG II added enhancements that made it a mainstay programming language for business applications on IBM's System/3x midrange computers.  (rocket-propelled grenade RPG, or rocket-propelled grenade is a loose term describing hand-held, shoulder-launched anti-tank weapons capable of firing an unguided rocket equipped with an explosive warhead.  launcher) on my shoulder. ...I became a dangerous smuggler'. But increasingly, Dost finds himself being run out of the drug business by a group of more powerful police commanders.

"These commanders have been shutting out all other competitors in the drug trafficking business, says Commander Dost. A few years back, one of these commanders sent eight men to ambush (language) AMBUSH - A language for linear programming problems in a materials processing and transportation network.

["AMBUSH - An Advanced Model Builder for Linear Programming", T.R. White et al, National Petroleum Refiners Assoc Comp Conf (Nov 1971)].
 Commander Dost. 'Fortunately I had 25 of my [tribesmen] with me', says Dost. 'I used the RPG and fired at the enemy in front of us, and behind us. Finally I made about $70,000 for myself from the drug money'. But at one point, he was captured with $370,000 worth of heroin, and had to sell everything he had - including his Swiss Rado watches and most of his heavy weapons - in order to pay back the owners of that drug.

"In another instance, Dost was captured by his chief competitor, another police commander. The commander 'caught me once with 56 kg of drugs. He asked me, 'Will you do it again?' and I told him that I would never do that again. Right after I promised him that I would not do that again, I came home and took another 100 kilos of drug and put it in my Russian jeep and took it to sell. These persecutors do it themselves, like 300 kilos to 400 kilos each time', Dost complains. These days, 'all the smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain  is now in the hands' of these commanders, 'and no one can do anything without [their] permission. Except me. When I do it, I tell my boys, 'Anybody who wants to stop you, you should kill them'".

Commander Nasir: "'Commander Nasir' is the police commander of a border district in Takhar Province. Like Commander Dost, Nasir is a relatively small player in the drug trade, but he gives an inside picture of how some of the bigger police commanders - both in Afghanistan and in neighboring neigh·bor  
n.
1. One who lives near or next to another.

2. A person, place, or thing adjacent to or located near another.

3. A fellow human.

4. Used as a form of familiar address.

v.
 Tajikistan - punish pun·ish  
v. pun·ished, pun·ish·ing, pun·ish·es

v.tr.
1. To subject to a penalty for an offense, sin, or fault.

2. To inflict a penalty for (an offense).

3.
 drug-trafficking competitors to burnish their law-enforcement credentials CREDENTIALS, international law. The instruments which authorize and establish a public minister in his character with the state or prince to whom they are addressed. If the state or prince receive the minister, he can be received only in the quality attributed to him in his credentials. , or take bribes from those willing to pay for favorable fa·vor·a·ble  
adj.
1. Advantageous; helpful: favorable winds.

2. Encouraging; propitious: a favorable diagnosis.

3.
 treatment. 'One day I counted how much I had given' a top police commander, says Nasir, who was a longtime long·time  
adj.
Having existed or persisted for a long time: a longtime friend; a longtime resident of Detroit.


longtime
Adjective
 commander during the Russian war, fighting alongside Northern Alliance commander Ahmed Shah Ahmed Shah: see Ahmad Shah.  Masood. From drug sales and fees, 'it was $680,000, just in cash'. Nasir pauses. '$680,000! A lot of money, isn't it? But believe me, he [the commander] never had any intention to do anything good for me in return, ever'. Nasir says all the big smuggling these days is being conducted by relatives of this top commander, some of whom are police commanders in Takhar. One relative 'takes $50 per kilo Thousand (10 to the 3rd power). Abbreviated "K." For technical specifications, it refers to the precise value 1,024 since computer specifications are based on binary numbers. For example, 64K means 65,536 bytes when referring to memory or storage (64x1024), but a 64K salary means $64,000.  to carry it from this side to that side of the border near Tajikistan. And if he catches somebody else smuggling, he takes $5,000 to $10,000 each time'.

"Nasir says he has stopped taking drugs across the border himself, because he is too well known, but he continues to send his men to do the job instead. Instead of paying his men immediately after a successful mission, now he pays them a week later, so that competing police commanders don't discover his smuggling until it's over. 'When I was a big smuggler, I had relations with the Tajik officers on the other side of the border. But my competitor has relations with the Russian KGB', he says. '[His] people have damaged my business a lot. Once I lost $500,000 of heroin, another time $600,000, another time $700,000, another time $900,000, another time $1.1 million because of [his] people'.

"Nasir laughs. 'My opponents have knocked out my 32 teeth'. But as bad as things are with the powerful commander - and after an assassination Assassination
See also Murder.

assassins

Fanatical Moslem sect that smoked hashish and murdered Crusaders (11th—12th centuries). [Islamic Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 52]

Brutus

conspirator and assassin of Julius Caesar. [Br.
 attempt by the top commander against Nasir, relations are pretty bad - Nasir says he wants to be practical and keep the peace, for now. 'I have a lot of proof and evidence against [the commander]', he says, 'but I want to keep my relations good with him'"

Ahmed Noor: "'Ahmed Noor' is the police commander of a market town along the Afghan-Tajik border in Takhar Province. In the tape, Mr. Noor admits that he's involved in drug trafficking, and gives an up-to-date breakdown of how much profit corrupt police officials make per kilo in the drug trade. But Noor notes with chagrin that other, more powerful commanders are making much more money than he is.

"Mentioning one police commander by name, Noor says, '[He] is not happy with $20,000 a night from drug money', he says. 'He charged $40 per kilo to transport it to the other side of the border. [He] himself is at home, resting and watching movies, and he plays cards with friends'. This commander moves more than 600 kilos every night, and at $40 a kilo, that's a hefty heft·y  
adj. heft·i·er, heft·i·est
1. Of considerable weight; heavy.

2. Rugged and powerful. See Synonyms at heavy.

3.
 profit, Noor says. 'Believe me, I know he did this six times a week'. But while big players like this commander are able to move large quantities of heroin through Takhar Province, and even through Noor's own district, Noor says that this powerful commander won't share this business with other commanders.

"Once, Noor says, this commander warned Noor to stop trafficking in drugs. Noor refused. So the commander started setting up checkpoints to try to catch Noor in the act of smuggling. At one such checkpoint, Noor was driving the car himself, and rather than stop at the checkpoint, he floored the accelerator and attempted to run over an armed soldier blocking the road. 'I had 500 kilos of drugs with me, and I was not going to give up that easily', he says. 'So I drove fast to run over the soldier. The soldier runs away and shoots in the air. After I unloaded the car at the border, I came back to the commander of the checkpoint, and asked him why his soldier wanted to stop me. [The checkpoint commander] told me it was the order of [the top commander]. So I warned [the checkpoint commander] and told him that the drug money goes to [the commander's] pocket, but why he is stopping other people's cars "People's Car" may refer to:
  • Nickname of a $2,500 car being developed by Tata Motors in Indiahttp://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/12/business/worldbusiness/12cars.html?_r=2&th&emc=th&.
  • Volkswagen
. I told him, 'the next time you try to stop me, I will shoot your head to pieces with bullets'.

"Noor admits that the drug business is getting more difficult, and his business partners are becoming less trustworthy. 'One day, I took 60 kilos of drugs to the other side of the border to Dushanbe, but the Tajik smuggler took it and did not pay me', he says. 'No one can do anything to Tajik smugglers on their soil'. Noor blames the incident on his own sense of trust. 'I believed one of my Afghan friends, who told me that this Tajik guy pays better than the others. I believed him'".

Commander Bilal: "'Commander Bilal' is a senior administrator in the provincial Takhar police force, and a former police commander of a border district along the Tajik border. In his tape, Bilal complains that police discipline is breaking down, and the trafficking has become so fractured that even low-level cops are starting to skim profits. More important, he reveals that drug corruption has infiltrated deep within the Ministry of Interior, the chief law-enforcement organization, as top officials take bribes to appoint corrupt drug dealers into top police positions. On paper, Bilal is one of the most powerful police commanders in his province, with many district commanders under him. But in reality, with district commanders deeply involved in the drug trade, few of the police officials in Takhar pay attention to him.

"Things were better, Bilal says, when he was a district police commander. But even then, it wasn't so good. As a trafficking point, his border town was highly overrated Overrated was a Horde World of Warcraft guild, based on the US Black Dragonflight Realm. On November 2 2006, the majority of the guild members were indefinitely banned from the game for use of (or directly benefiting from) a third-party "wall-hack", used to bypass content . 'What have they seen [about that town]?', he asks. 'There is only one bridge, and anyone you send - even your brother - will not bring any smuggler to you. If some one is caught there and brought to me, I will get $10,000 from him [in bribes]. But that poor soldier (Zool.) the friar bird.

See also: Poor
 standing there will accept $200 from the smuggler [to let him pass through] instead of bringing him to me. I can't stand there myself on the bridge, because it is shameful'.

"In any case, Bilal says his relations with the drug smugglers was never very warm. 'I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 why, but the smugglers did not trust us', says Bilal. He thinks for a moment, and then continues. One of his colleagues in the police department in the border town, 'was playing games with the smugglers. [This commander] is the kind of person who cut a deal with smugglers, takes money from them, and further on up the road, stops and seizes their drugs, too. That was the reason the smugglers did not trust us'.

"Bilal says almost all the police commanders in Takhar have paid officials at the Ministry of Interior to get their jobs, and nowadays, commanders have to pay increasing amounts just to keep their jobs. 'Every three months the commanders are pushed a little bit or they are told that they may be replaced. Then everybody rushes toward the ministry with $10,000'. But Bilal says he likes his job. It's not the responsibilities that he likes the most, though. It's the access to the drug trade. 'It is a good position', he says. 'I pay $1,000 and get $20,000 in profit. It has some advantages', he says.
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Title Annotation:Ahmed Noor
Publication:APS Diplomat News Service
Geographic Code:9AFGH
Date:Jun 19, 2006
Words:2099
Previous Article:The Taliban Campaign.
Next Article:At Interior Ministry, 80% Benefit.(Ali Jalali )
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