- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record, as Trump claims victory
- Trump claims victory over Harris in US presidential election
- Multiple US states extend abortion rights, while Florida measure fails
- Thousands in Israel protest sacking of defence minister
- Anti-Brussels firebrand Orban to host European leaders in Hungary
- Trump on verge of victory over Harris
- China says ex-government worker to be executed for spying
- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record, stocks swing as Trump win seen
- Mood darkens at Democratic parties as Trump gains key states
- Afghanistan poppy cultivation grows 19 percent despite ban: UN
- Toyota maintains net profit forecast despite drop in first half
- Trump pushes ahead of Harris with second swing state win
- Snow seen on Mount Fuji after record absence
- Trump wins swing state, edges ahead of Harris in US election
- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record, stocks gain as Trump win seen
- Talent, toil and pleasing Kim bring N. Korea women's football glory
- Harris or Trump? US election heads for cliffhanger
- Dollar soars, bitcoin hits record and stocks rally as Trump win seen
- Sarah McBride to be first transgender person in US Congress
- Florida ballot initiative to extend abortion rights fails
- Russia blamed for hoax bomb threats at US voting sites
- Taiwan students design drones for mock battle, as China threat looms
- Florida ballot initiative to extend abortion rights fails: US media
- Trafficked: the girls sold for sex in India
- Japan's Tenga wants to make sex toys more mainstream
- Russian senators to ratify North Korean defence pact
- Warner back as cricket captain after leadership ban lifted
- Asian markets rise with dollar, bitcoin as ealy US results roll in
- Cuba on alert as Hurricane Rafael approaches
- Snow seen on Mount Fuji after record time without
- Ohtani has surgery on injured shoulder - Dodgers
- Pop-up concerts try to soothe anxious voters as US goes to polls
- Sporting's rout of Man City doesn't guarantee success with Man Utd: Amorim
- Top Mexican court nixes bid to invalidate election of judges
- FBI warns of hoax bomb threats from Russia at US voting sites
- Liverpool the 'complete' team, says Alonso after Leverkusen humbled
- Diaz hits hat-trick as Liverpool spoil Alonso's return to Anfield
- Sporting stun Man City in Champions League as Liverpool, Milan claim fine wins
- 'Like a little boy': Uruguay's Forlan on his tennis pro debut
- Man City in a 'dark place' but Guardiola vows to solve the crisis
- Substitute Malen's late strike lifts Dortmund past Sturm Graz
- Lille deny Juventus in Champions League stalemate
- NBA suspends Embiid three games for shoving journalist
- Thousands in Tel Aviv protest Israel defence minister's sacking
- Kehrer snatches late Champions League win for Monaco at Bologna
- Celtic inflict more Champions League pain on Leipzig
- AC Milan topple Champions League holders Real Madrid
- Ruthless Liverpool spoil Alonso's return to Anfield
- Amorim's Sporting crush Man City as Gyokeres hits hat-trick
- German's family doesn't 'trust anything' said by Iran on his death: daughter
Afghanistan poppy cultivation grows 19 percent despite ban: UN
Opium cultivation rose by 19 percent in Afghanistan this year, the UN reported Wednesday, despite a Taliban government ban that almost eradicated the crop.
Currently, 12,800 hectares of poppies are cultivated in Afghanistan -- where up to 80 percent of the population depends on agriculture -- a new survey by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) shows, the agency said in a statement.
The 19 percent increase year-on-year remains far below the 232,000 hectares cultivated when Taliban supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada banned the crop in April 2022, nearly a year after the Taliban returned to power, UNODC added.
The centre of poppy cultivation has also shifted, the agency noted, and is now concentrated in northeastern provinces instead of in the Taliban strongholds of southern Afghanistan.
In May, clashes between farmers and brigades sent to destroy their poppy fields resulted in several deaths in northeastern Badakhshan.
Following the poppy ban, prices soared for the resin from which opium and heroin are made.
During the first half of 2024, prices stabilised around $730 per kilogram, (two pounds) according to the UNODC, compared to about $100 per kg before 2022.
For years Afghanistan was the world's biggest supplier of opium and heroin.
Many farmers in Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries in the world, were hit hard financially by the ban and have not been able to reap the same profits from alternative crops.
Even legal crops are only a short-term solution, according to the International Crisis Group (ICG), "so the focus should be on job creation in non-farm industries".
The UNODC and the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) called for international support for farmers to transition to alternative crops and livelihoods, something the Taliban government has requested.
"With opium cultivation remaining at a low level in Afghanistan, we have the opportunity and responsibility to support Afghan farmers to develop sustainable sources of income free from illicit markets," said UNODC Executive Director Ghada Waly in the statement.
D.Moore--AMWN