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Over 2 tons of narcotics seized by police in southeastern Iran

1 July 2014 10:55 (UTC+04:00)
Over 2 tons of narcotics seized by police in southeastern Iran

The drug combat squads of Iranˈs police have seized more than 2,000 kilograms of illicit drugs in Kerman province in a single operation, a senior provincial commander announced on Monday, IRNA reported.

"We have discovered a sum of over 2 tons of narcotics in Kerman province in a single operation," Provincial Police Chief Brigadier General Hossein Chenarian told reporters today.

According to official estimates, Iranˈs battle against drugs cost the country around $1 billion annually. Strategies pursued by Tehran include digging canals, building barriers and installing barbed wire to seal the countryˈs borders, especially in the East.

While Afghanistan produced only 185 tons of opium per year under the Taliban, according to the UN statistics, since the US-led invasion, drug production has surged to 3,400 tons annually. In 2007, the opium trade reached an estimated all-time production high of 8,200 tons.

Iran has long complained that the global community, specially the western nations, do not contribute their role in the campaign against drugs, saying that Iran is making lone efforts to block the transit of narcotics from Afghanistan to Europe and the US. Meantime, the Iranian police officials maintain that drug production in Afghanistan has undergone a 40-fold increase since the US-led invasion of the country in 2001.

Iran lies on a major drug route between Afghanistan and Europe, as well as the Persian Gulf states.

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