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Afghanistan markets its pomegranates

It's sweet, red and juicy — and a better alternative to opium poppies

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updated 7:40 p.m. ET Nov. 20, 2008

KABUL, Afghanistan - This ancient land is telling the world that it has a trendy, new replacement for its dreaded poppy crop: sweet, juicy pomegranates.

The country will stamp a logo on all boxes of the pomegranate for export: a drawing of the sliced, red fruit with seeds spilling out and a label that announces, "Anar, Afghan Pomegranate." Anar is the word for pomegranate in various regional languages.

Afghanistan officials hope the Western-style sales savvy will raise the pomegranate's cachet and provide its farmers with a lucrative alternative to growing opium poppies.

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It's the latest step in a $12 million, U.S.-funded initiative to modernize and expand Afghanistan's pomegranate industry, which has long depended on domestic sales and small-scale exports to nearby countries. Even these exports have been severely hit by years of border fighting.

Even though the Afghan pomegranate is considered one of the best in the world, it has been very much a local delicacy. The fruit is about the size of an apple, with a thick, reddish skin and hundreds of seeds embedded in tough, white pulp. This time of year, the red seed casings are consumed everywhere in Kabul — as juice, spooned straight from the fruit, or piled on a tray and sold by the scoop to picnickers in parks.

Source of antioxidants
Pomegranates are riding a wave of popularity in Europe and the United States, where they are celebrated for their high levels of antioxidants, which protect cells from damage by compounds called free radicals. U.S. domestic supply comes largely from California's San Joaquin Valley, augmented by imports from Israel, Turkey, Lebanon, Greece and Mexico.

Last year, Afghanistan exported its first pomegranates to outlets of the French chain Carrefour in Dubai. The fruit, larger and redder than many pomegranates imported from Turkey or North Africa, was a hit. Carrefour quickly placed orders for all its Middle East stores, according to U.S. funders and Afghan officials.

"They found out that Anar from Afghanistan is probably the best tasting. It's sweet; it's juicy," Afghanistan Agriculture Minister Mohammad Asif Rahimi said at the launch ceremony at a Kabul hotel Wednesday.

Afghanistan's best export — agricultural or otherwise — is opium.

It produced 8,200 tons of the drug in 2007, up 34 percent from the previous year. Though opium production is expected to drop back this year, Afghanistan will remain the world's largest producer of the crop by far.

Yet farmers willing to put in the extra care and investment required for fruit trees can make more money growing pomegranates, said Loren Stoddard, USAID's head of alternative development and agriculture.

On average, farmers make about $2,000 per acre with pomegranates, versus $1,320 per acre growing poppies, Stoddard said.

Surviving in a war zone
But in a country where large regions are still very much a war zone, there are still major barriers and high costs to creating any sort of sustainable export business. Trucks on major transit routes are subject to frequent attacks. Last year's test run of pomegranates were flown out on U.S. military planes.

Anthony Cordesman, an Afghanistan and Middle East expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, warned that Afghanistan lacks the security, infrastructure and oversight to make projects like the pomegranate initiative realistic.

"Almost all of the measures that people suggest — buying the crop, introducing alternative crops — depend on there being a government presence and a police presence in the field that is honest," Cordesman said. "At this point in time, that's impossible."

He added that many of the alternative crop schemes being introduced in Afghanistan already were tried and abandoned as failures in Latin America.

"That was in countries with far more effective market systems. Reinventing the wheel isn't going to eliminate drugs," he said.


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