PESHAWAR, Dec 29: Balochistan Governor Owais Ghani here on Monday said Pakistan had asked European states and Washington to help curtail poppy production in Afghanistan because it would be difficult for Islamabad to control drug smuggling from across the border.

“We have asked the US government and European countries to take effective measures to help curtail the poppy yield in Afghanistan, otherwise we would not be able to check its smuggling into Balochistan,” said the governor.

The Balochistan governor, who was on a private visit to Peshawar, said the war-torn country had an all time high production of around 4,500 ton of poppy.

“It is a major cause of concern for us because the bulk of the opium produced in Afghanistan finds its way in Balochistan,” he said while explaining difficulties his government is facing in checking drug smuggling from Afghanistan.

Though poppy cultivated in Balochistan had been destroyed under an administrative arrangement, it would be very difficult for the provincial government to check drug smuggling from the neighbouring country as international forces posted in Afghanistan did not take appropriate measures to eradicate the illegal crop, he said.

“The long border with Afghanistan in addition to the presence of so many criminal gangs are some of the problems making things difficult for the government of Balochistan to check human and drug smuggling, and gun running,” said the governor.

He said the geographical location of Balochistan sharing porous borders with Afghanistan and Iran, and a lengthy coastal line along the border were a big administrative issue for the provincial government.

The governor refuted the Afghan president’s charge that Pakistan had not been checking the presence of terrorists linked to Taliban in its tribal areas and parts of Balochistan.

“It is a wrong perception. There are no Taliban elements hiding in the Balochistan areas close to the border,” said Owais Ghani terming incorrect a statement of Karzai that Taliban supreme leader Mullah Omar was recently seen in Quetta.

“They [Afghan authorities] have their own problems,” said Mr Ghani, adding that “they should concentrate on solving their own problems instead of putting blame on others for their failures”.

When his attention was drawn towards a recently given statement of Awami National Party chief Asfandyar Wali Khan, in which he shared concerns of Mr Karzai, the governor rejected them.

He said Pakistani security forces in a recent operation had bulldozed all the houses constructed on the border line between the two countries to check infiltration of unwanted elements from both sides of the border.

ECONOMIC UPLIFT: He expressed the hope that the uplift initiatives taken by the government in Balochistan would help prosper the province.

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