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The 2004 Opium Survey in Myanmar reveals a significant decrease in opium poppy cultivation, with a 29% decrease since 2003 and a cumulative decrease of 73% since 1996. This report provides insights into the opium production, seizure of ATS, farm-gate prices, and the impact on the economy and basic human needs of the farmers. The UNODC's KOWI Programme aims to address the basic human needs of poppy farmers with a focus on food security, medical care, education, sustainability, and domestic political reform.
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Opium poppy cultivation in 2004 estimated to have decreased to 44,200 ha 29% decrease since 2003 66% cumulative decrease since 1998 and 73% since 1996 -73% US Department of State GoUM - UNODC
The Union of Myanmar (former Burma) • Population : 52 million • GDP / capita: ~US$ 160 • 2nd opium producer in the world after Afghanistan • Opium Poppy cultivation concentrated in the Shan State ShanState
METHODOLOGY OF THE 2004 OPIUM SURVEY In the Shan State: • 59 high-resolution satellite images (IKONOS, 4-meter multispectral) • 68 opium fields measured • 598 villages surveyed - 6,592 households interviewed SHAN STATE
Opium poppy cultivation in the Golden Triangle since 1990: cumulative reduction of 77% between 1991 and 2004 -77%
2004 Myanmar opium production: record low at 370 tons • Potential heroin production decreased to 37 tons (-54% compared to 2003) -54%
No indication of increase in ATS production Reported seizure of ATS in Myanmar kg kg Reported seizure of ATS in neighbouring countries
Opium farm-gate prices increased by 80% Mong Pawk Opiun Price Monitor All Shan State Total potential farm-gate value of opium in 2004: US$87 million (1% – 2 % of GDP)
Non-Opium family 276 US$/year Opium family 214 US$/year How does opium poppy cultivation stand up against other income generation activities? • 260,000 households involved in opium poppy cultivation
UNODC’s Response: Addressing Basic Human Needs • Opium farmers rely on poppy income to offset chronic rice deficits • 2005 opium ban in the Wa will exacerbate poverty of farmers, 2003 ban in Kokang had dramatic consequences • UNODC aims to address the basic human needs of poppy farmers and their families • Food security • Medical care • Education
Five Key Goals - UNODC Response (KOWI Programme): • Humanitarian • Providing food security for the affected poor • Sustainability • Consolidating achievements by offering alternatives • Human rights • Reductions without alternatives open up the door for human rights abuses – forced relocation and labor • Domestic political reform • Current drug situation breeds instability and hinders political transition • Regional security • Drugs create transnational problems from HIV/AIDS to corruption and money laundering