But there is still more to this phenomenon than just rural-to-urban migration. And the impacts in this context are not always immediate. Take for example, the case of the Kajakai Dam in the Helmand province of Afghanistan. Its construction and the devastation that it caused is discussed in some detail in BBC’s 2015 documentary Bitter Lake, made by the brilliant British documentary filmmaker Adam Curtis; and in the 2010 book Environmental Histories of the Cold War.
In the 1950s, King Zahir Shah of Afghanistan, initiated a developmental programme in his country to modernise its agriculture and economy. This also included the construction of dams. On the advice of American experts, one such dam was to be built in the country’s Helmand province.
American engineers and geologists arrived and began to construct the dam — the Kajakai Dam. Construction work displaced hundreds of peasants and herdsmen. In 1953, as the dam neared completion, some observers warned that it may cause waterlogging and salinity in the surrounding areas, sullying the fertile soil of the area. But the warnings were not heeded and the problem not addressed. According to Curtis, the then prime minister, Daoud Khan, encouraged the expansion of the dam because, being a staunch Pashtun nationalist, he wanted more Pashtun families to settle in Helmand that borders a Pashtun majority area of Pakistan’s Balochistan province.
By the time Daoud toppled King Zahir in 1973, the salinisation problem caused by the dam had compounded. Despite the availability of irrigated water, the soil became problematic to harvest cash crops such as cotton. Instead, it became perfect to grow another ‘cash crop’: poppy. The economy of the area thus began to revolve around poppy which is used to prepare the highly addictive narcotic heroin. For this very purpose, Helmand became extremely important to warlords fighting Soviet forces in the 1980s and then against the fanatical Taliban regime.
Curtis describes Helmand as one of Afghanistan’s most violent and corrupt regions, mainly due to the poppy that is grown there in abundance. Ironically, despite the fact that the Taliban regime attempted to eradicate poppy farms in the country, after the regime was removed in 2002, Taliban insurgents regularly interact with Helmand’s poppy growers and corrupt Afghan officials to sustain the area’s poppy farms (irrigated by the dam). The poppy crop sustains the growers, enriches the officials and helps finance the Taliban’s insurgency against US forces. The dam thus became a man-made environmental disaster that, instead of enhancing a country’s agricultural fortunes, became the harbinger of corruption, violence and war.
Published in Dawn, EOS, September 29th, 2019