From Golden Triangle to Rubber Belt?

Julio 2009
From Golden Triangle to Rubber Belt?

In the Kokang and Wa regions in northern Burma opium bans have ended poppy cultivation, but have caused chronic poverty and food insecurity as a result.

In the Kokang and Wa regions in northern Burma opium bans have ended over a century of poppy cultivation. The bans have had dramatic consequences for local communities. They depended on opium as a cash crop, to buy food, clothing, and medicines.

The bans have driven poppy-growing communities into chronic poverty and have adversely affected their food security. Very few alternatives are being offered to households for their survival. The Kokang and Wa cease-fire groups have implemented these bans following international pressure, especially from neighbouring China. In return, they hope to gain international political recognition and aid to develop their impoverished and war-torn regions.

The Kokang and Wa authorities have been unable to provide alternative sources of income for ex-poppy farmers. Instead they have promoted Chinese invest-ment in monoplantations, especially in rubber. These projects have created many undesired effects and do not significantly profit the population.

Conclusions & Recommendations

• The opium bans have driven communities into chronic poverty and have adversely affected their food security and access to health care and education.

• The Kokang and Wa authorities have promoted Chinese investment in mono-plantations, especially in rubber. These projects are unsustainable and do not significantly profit the population.

• Ex-poppy farmers mainly rely on casual labour and collecting Non-Timber Forest Products as alternative source of income.

• Current interventions by international NGOs and UN agencies are still limited in scale and can best be described as “emer-gency responses”.

• If the many challenges to achieving viable legal livelihoods in the Kokang and Wa regions are not addressed, the reductions in opium cultivation are unlikely to be sustainable.

Title of overall publication: 
From Golden Triangle to Rubber Belt?
Páginas: 
12pages
Series: 
Drug Policy Briefing 29

Investigador del programa Drogas y Democracia del TNI

Tom Kramer (1968) es un politólogo con más de 15 años de experiencia sobre Birmania y sus regiones fronterizas, a donde viaja con frecuencia desde 1993.  

Su trabajo se centra entender mejor cómo funciona el mercado de las drogas en el conjunto de la región, la relación entre producción y consumo, y el desarrollo alternativo. Junto con el programa Drogas y Democracia, Tom ha creado una red regional de investigadores locales y se dedica también a la incidencia entre los encargados de la formulación de políticas de la región para conseguir políticas de drogas más sostenibles y humanas.

Desde 2005, Tom también trabaja sobre Afganistán, especialmente sobre la relación entre drogas y conflicto, y la participación de las fuerzas de seguridad europeas en las actividades de lucha contra los estupefacientes. Además de su labor en el marco del TNI, también trabaja como escritor y asesor independiente, especializado en conflictos étnicos y sociedad civil en Birmania. Tom ha realizado investigaciones de campo y ha redactado informes para un gran número de ONG internacionales, institutos y organismos de la ONU.