A/RES/65/8
74. Calls for the provision of continued international assistance to the large
numbers of Afghan refugees and internally displaced persons to facilitate their
voluntary, safe, dignified and orderly return and sustainable reintegration into
society so as to contribute to the stability of the entire country;
75. Recognizes that underdevelopment and lack of capacity increase the
vulnerability of Afghanistan to natural disasters and to harsh climate conditions, and
urges in this regard the Government of Afghanistan, with the support of the
international community, to increase its efforts aimed at strengthening disaster risk
reduction at the national and subnational levels and at modernizing the agricultural
sector and strengthening its agricultural production, thereby reducing the
vulnerability of Afghanistan to adverse external conditions such as drought,
flooding and other natural disasters;
76. Commends the relief efforts by the Government of Afghanistan and
donors, but continues to express its concern at the overall humanitarian situation,
stresses the continued need for food assistance, and calls for continued international
support for and the early fulfilment, before the approaching winter, of the funding
target of the Afghanistan Humanitarian Action Plan;
77. Welcomes the efforts of the Government of Afghanistan in fighting drug
production in Afghanistan, takes note of the sharp drop in opium production as
reported by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in the Afghanistan
Opium Survey 2010, released on 30 September 2010, 12 which notes plant infection
as the main reason for the drop in opium production, but reiterates its deep concern
about the continued cultivation and production of narcotic drugs in Afghanistan,
mainly concentrated in areas where the Taliban, Al-Qaida and other extremist and
criminal groups are particularly active, as well as the ongoing drug trafficking, and
stresses the need for more coordinated and resolute efforts by the Government of
Afghanistan, supported by the international community, to fight this menace;
1F
78. Stresses the importance of a comprehensive approach in addressing the
drug problem of Afghanistan, which, to be effective, must be integrated into the
wider context of efforts carried out in the areas of security, governance, the rule of
law and human rights, and economic and social development, and also stresses that
the development of alternative livelihood programmes is of key importance in the
success of the counter-narcotics efforts in Afghanistan;
79. Notes with great concern the increasingly strong nexus between the drug
trade and terrorist activities by the Taliban, Al-Qaida and other extremist and
criminal groups, which pose a serious threat to security, the rule of law and
development in Afghanistan, and stresses the importance of the full implementation
of all relevant Security Council resolutions in this regard, including resolutions
1735 (2006) of 22 December 2006 and 1822 (2008);
80. Calls upon all Member States in this regard to further intensify their
efforts to reduce the demand for drugs in their respective countries and globally in
order to contribute to the sustainability of the elimination of illicit cultivation in
Afghanistan;
81. Stresses the need to prevent trafficking in and diversion of chemical
precursors used in the illicit manufacturing of drugs in Afghanistan, and calls for the
full implementation of Security Council resolution 1817 (2008) in this regard;
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Available from www.unodc.org/unodc/en/crop-monitoring/index.html.
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