The US Promotes Legal Crop Production in the Newly Merged Districts
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad, Islamabad, August 06, 2021 – On August 5, the U.S. Mission to Pakistan,
the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa the government celebrated the successful completion of a $984,000 project that
provided more than 4,000 farmers’ households with alternatives to illicit crop
production in the Bajaur, Khyber, Torghar, and Mohmand districts.
Director of the Embassy’s International Narcotics and Law Enforcement
(INL) section Mark Tervakoski, FAO representative Rebekah Bell, KP Agriculture
Minister Mohib Ullah Khan, and Director General of the Agriculture Extension
Department Abid Kamal participated in the ceremony.
Under this INL-funded project, FAO provided alternative livelihoods to farmers formerly
engaged in or vulnerable to illicit crop cultivation. More than
4,000 farmers, including 1200 women, received wheat, onion, corn, tomato,
cucumber, and sunflower seeds; olive plants; training; and agriculture machinery
and tools – including shovels, spray pumps, tractors, and leveling and
harvesting machines– to grow high-value licit crops.
Rebekah
Bell, FAO’s Representative for Pakistan, highlighted the cooperation under this
project and said, “FAO’s partnership with INL and the Government of Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa has been excellent in the promotion of high-value crops to
create stable sources of livelihoods for the vulnerable communities in the
newly merged districts.”
INL Director
Mark Tervakoski also reflected on the impact of the partnership between the
U.S. government, FAO, and the KP government: “This project ensured
farmers, vulnerable to poppy cultivation, have alternate, more lucrative, legal
crop cultivation opportunities to pursue that promote a more secure and prosperous
Pakistan and region.”
For more
For 30 years, the United States and Pakistan have worked together to reduce
the supply of poppy and other illicit drugs by increasing access to alternative
livelihoods opportunities for the most vulnerable farmers of KP province.
INL works in more than 90 countries to help combat crime and corruption,
counter the narcotics trade, improve police institutions, and promote court
systems that are fair and accountable. Find out more about INL at: http://www.state.gov/j/inl
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