Afghan army general arrested for trafficking heroin: officials
Brigadier General Abdul Samad Habib was taken into custody as he attempted to smuggle illegal drugs in his vehicle
KABUL:
An Afghan army general has been arrested by police for trafficking around 19 kilograms (41 pounds) of heroin powder, officials said on Wednesday.
Brigadier General Abdul Samad Habib, the head of the recruitment division for the Afghan army in northern Balkh province was taken into custody in Baghlan province on Tuesday, as he attempted to smuggle illegal drugs in his vehicle, defence ministry spokesperson Dawlat Waziri told AFP.
"I confirm he is in custody, and is accused of trafficking heroin," Waziri said.
A spokesperson for police in Baghlan province said that two other military personnel, a driver and another soldier, were also detained along with the brigadier general.
"He was planning to get the heroin to Nangarhar province near the border with Pakistan and then smuggle it out of the country," Ahmad Jawed Basharat told AFP.
Despite a decade of costly multi-billion US and international counter-narcotics programmes, Afghanistan remains the world's largest producer of opium, which is refined to produce heroin.
Read: Afghan drug users nearly double
Production has increased 7 per cent over the past year, thanks in part to an ongoing Taliban insurgency and lack of government control in remote areas, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
Addiction levels have also soared -- from almost nothing under the 1996-2001 Taliban regime -- to around 1.4 million addicts in 2014, according to a survey conducted jointly by the Afghan health ministry and US state department.
An Afghan army general has been arrested by police for trafficking around 19 kilograms (41 pounds) of heroin powder, officials said on Wednesday.
Brigadier General Abdul Samad Habib, the head of the recruitment division for the Afghan army in northern Balkh province was taken into custody in Baghlan province on Tuesday, as he attempted to smuggle illegal drugs in his vehicle, defence ministry spokesperson Dawlat Waziri told AFP.
"I confirm he is in custody, and is accused of trafficking heroin," Waziri said.
A spokesperson for police in Baghlan province said that two other military personnel, a driver and another soldier, were also detained along with the brigadier general.
"He was planning to get the heroin to Nangarhar province near the border with Pakistan and then smuggle it out of the country," Ahmad Jawed Basharat told AFP.
Despite a decade of costly multi-billion US and international counter-narcotics programmes, Afghanistan remains the world's largest producer of opium, which is refined to produce heroin.
Read: Afghan drug users nearly double
Production has increased 7 per cent over the past year, thanks in part to an ongoing Taliban insurgency and lack of government control in remote areas, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
Addiction levels have also soared -- from almost nothing under the 1996-2001 Taliban regime -- to around 1.4 million addicts in 2014, according to a survey conducted jointly by the Afghan health ministry and US state department.