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Western countries will face ‘massive influx of drugs’ if Iran becomes weakened by US sanctions, President Hassan Rouhani warns

Country lies on major global drug route and spent around £2bn annually to fight trafficking until sanctions reimposed, officials say 

Amir Vahdat
Saturday 08 December 2018 08:17 EST
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Western countries will face ‘influx of drugs’ if Iran becomes weakened by US sanctions, President Hassan Rouhani warns

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Iran’s president Hassan Rouhani has warned western countries that they will face a massive influx of drugs if Iran becomes weakened by US sanctions.

Mr Rouhani spoke in Tehran on Saturday at a six-nation conference on fighting terrorism attended by policy makers from Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, Turkey, China and Russia.

In comments broadcast on state TV, Mr Rouhani said a weakened Iran would be less able to fight drug trafficking.

“Weakening Iran by sanctions, many will not be safe,” he said. “Those who do not believe us, it is good to look at the map.”

Iran lies on a major drug route between Afghanistan and Europe and the Persian Gulf states.

Afghanistan is the world’s largest producer of opium with its Helmand Province being the biggest opium-producing region.

Opium is the raw material for heroin and Afghan farmers harvest about 80 per cent of the world’s supply, according to UN reports.

Iran’s economy has suffered since the US re-imposed sanctions lifted under Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.

Donald Trump withdrew the US from the deal and began restoring sanctions, a move which Mr Rouhani describes as “economic terrorism”.

Iran pays a heavy price to fight drug trafficking, with a number of border guards killed in fighting drug smugglers every year.

Every year, the country burns about 100 tons of seized narcotics as a symbol of its determination.

Iran has also complained about accusations that it violates human rights by executing convicted drug smugglers, who make up 73 per cent of executions in Iran.

In 2013 alone, Iran spent more than £20m to dig canals, erect walls and embankments, create new outposts and set up barbed wire along its 2,000km border with Afghanistan and Pakistan, according to government statistics.

Until 2016, Iran spent nearly £2bn annually to fight drug trafficking, officials say.

AP

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