
-
Peru PM quits ahead of no-confidence vote
-
Strikes kill 29 in Gaza as hostage release talks ongoing
-
Court raps Brussels for lack of transparency on von der Leyen vaccine texts
-
France summons cryptocurrency businesses after kidnappings
-
Pakistan returns Indian border guard captured after Kashmir attack
-
Baidu plans self-driving taxi tests in Europe this year
-
Trump meets new Syria leader after lifting sanctions
-
Equity markets swing as China-US trade euphoria fades
-
Burberry warns 1,700 jobs at risk after annual loss
-
Trump to meet new Syrian leader after offering sanctions relief
-
'Children are innocent': Myanmar families in grief after school air strike
-
Colombia joins Belt and Road initiative as China courts Latin America
-
Australian champion cyclist Dennis gets suspended sentence after wife's road death
-
Protection racket? Asian semiconductor giants fear looming tariffs
-
S. Korea Starbucks in a froth over presidential candidates names
-
NATO hatches deal on higher spending to keep Trump happy
-
Eurovision stage a dynamic 3D 'playground': producer
-
Cruise unleashes 'Mission: Impossible' juggernaut at Cannes
-
Suaalii in race to be fit for Lions Tests after fracturing jaw
-
Pacers oust top-seeded Cavs, Nuggets on brink
-
Sony girds for US tariffs after record annual net profit
-
China, US slash sweeping tariffs in trade war climbdown
-
Human Rights Watch warns of migrant worker deaths in 2034 World Cup host Saudi Arabia
-
Sony logs 18% annual net profit jump, forecast cautious
-
China, US to lift sweeping tariffs in trade war climbdown
-
Asian markets swing as China-US trade euphoria fades
-
Australian seaweed farm tackles burps to help climate
-
Judgment day in EU chief's Covid vaccine texts case
-
Trump set to meet Syrian leader ahead of Qatar visit
-
Misinformation clouds Sean Combs's sex trafficking trial
-
'Panic and paralysis': US firms fret despite China tariff reprieve
-
Menendez brothers resentenced, parole now possible
-
'Humiliated': Combs's ex Cassie gives searing testimony of abuse
-
Latin America mourns world's 'poorest president' Mujica, dead at 89
-
Masters champion McIlroy to headline Australian Open
-
Fenjiu Liquor Elegance, Shared Worldwide: Asia-Pacific Cuisine Sino-Singapore Forum Successfully Concludes in Auckland
-
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners plc Announces Capital Markets Event
-
Hemogenyx Pharmaceuticals PLC Announces Pediatric Amendment to Clinical Protocol
-
Sean Combs's ex Cassie says he coerced her into 'disgusting' sex ordeals
-
McIlroy, Scheffler and Schauffele together for rainy PGA battle
-
Uruguay's Mujica, world's 'poorest president,' dies aged 89
-
Lift-off at Eurovision as first qualifiers revealed
-
Forest striker Awoniyi placed in induced coma after surgery: reports
-
'Kramer vs Kramer' director Robert Benton dies: representative
-
Tatum suffered ruptured right Achilles in playoff defeat: Celtics
-
US stocks mostly rise on better inflation data while dollar retreats
-
Winning farewell for Orlando Pirates' Spanish coach Riveiro
-
Lift-off at Eurovision as first semi-final takes flight
-
UN relief chief urges action 'to prevent genocide' in Gaza
-
Baseball pariahs Rose, Jackson eligible for Hall of Fame after league ruling

Poppy growth down 95% in Afghanistan since Taliban ban: UN
Poppy cultivation and opium production have plunged 95 percent in Afghanistan since Taliban authorities banned the crop, according to a UN report published Sunday.
Since returning to power in 2021, Taliban authorities have vowed to end illegal drug production in Afghanistan and in April 2022 banned the cultivation of the poppy plant, from which opium and heroin are made.
The report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) found that poppy cultivation has collapsed by an estimated 95 percent -- from 233,000 hectares (575,755 acres) at the end of 2022 to 10,800 in 2023.
Opium production has followed suit, plummeting from 6,200 tons to 333 tons in 2023.
This year's estimated harvest amounts to 24-38 tons of exportable heroin, compared with 350-580 tons last year.
The UNODC warned of potential "humanitarian consequences for many vulnerable rural communities" due to the sudden contraction of Afghanistan's opium economy, as growers have had to turn to far less lucrative alternative crops.
Farmers' incomes, estimated at $1.36 billion in 2022, have fallen by 92 percent to $110 million this year, according to the UNODC, with the loss expected to impact the country's already struggling economy more broadly.
Last year, poppy crops accounted for almost a third by value of total agricultural production in Afghanistan, the world's leading producer.
"Today, Afghanistan's people need urgent humanitarian assistance... to absorb the shock of lost income and save lives," said UNODC Executive Director Ghada Waly in a statement.
"For all the other production -- cotton, wheat -- they need much more water," she said at a briefing on the report, while the country was experiencing "three years of consecutive draught".
The Afghan interior ministry's narcotics department said it agrees "to a certain extent" with the UNODC report's estimates of the area under poppy cultivation.
But it dismissed other elements of the report, such as those regarding opium production and socio-economic data, because they were not based on field-based surveys, relying instead on satellite images and previous years' data.
O.M.Souza--AMWN