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Impoverished villagers see cannabis cultivation as lone lifeline
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User ID: 111884
08-03-2012 12:30 AM

Posts: 11,725



Post: #1
unsure Impoverished villagers see cannabis cultivation as lone lifeline
Located 5 kilometers west of Hermel in northeastern Lebanon, Zoueiteniye is now almost a ghost town as for years its residents have migrated to Beirut and its suburbs.

Many of the town’s stone houses are partially destroyed and just 10 remain occupied today. Most of Zoueiteniye’s original 500 residents have moved to the city as a result of the government’s neglect of the village and failure to ensure the most basic living standards.

One of the remaining residents, who asked to be identified by his initials M.F., works in agriculture and has five dunums (5,000 square meters) of cannabis fields.

He says cannabis cultivation provides his only source of income for his family, despite the fact that growing the drug contradicts his Muslim faith.

He adds that he faces only two options: He can either continue planting cannabis, which can earn $5,000 per month for his family, or make only $1,000 monthly from cultivating other crops. The resident says that the latter option would result in his children having to drop out of school.

F.S., a 50-year-old man who still resides in the village and also asked to be identified by just his initials, also grows and sells cannabis. He is wanted by the Lebanese judiciary for planting and dealing with the drug.

F.S. holds a degree in law from a private Lebanese university. He worked in many jobs in Beirut and its suburbs before returning to the village. He has been a longtime political activist and a member of one of the leftist parties.

When a drug dealer F.S. knew was arrested, his name also was listed as one of the dealers in the country.

“This is when I left political activism and became someone wanted by the judiciary,” the 50-year-old says.

F.S. refuses to surrender himself to the police.

Ali Jaffar, the deputy head of the municipality of Jouret al-Hashish in Hermel, says the practice of cannabis plantation in the area goes back 80 years. He says that successive Lebanese governments, regardless of their political affiliations, have destroyed the crop each year. Sometimes they have given subsidies to the affected farmers, he adds.


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