Sungguh benar kata2 para bijak dahulu bahwa Islam akan hancur oleh orang2 
PENGAKU Islam sendiri !
Dan bahkan yang sdah diharamkan dilanggar !
Makamanusia2 durhaka itulah yang mestinya manusia Atheis IBLIS yang brtkedok 
ISLAM !!!!!



--- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@...> wrote:
>
> Santri2 Islam ini ternyata kerja di ladang opium unt panen opium, hehehe...
> 
> Halal koq, krn auloh ga pernah ngeharamin manen opium.
> 
> Islam itu emang agama yg benar unt para bajingan keparat, bukan?
> 
> 
> http://tribune.com.pk/story/224821/illicit-drug-production-balochistan-madrassa-students-harvest-poppy-on-holidays/
> 
> Illicit drug production: Balochistan madrassa students harvest poppy on 
> holidays
> By Qaiser Butt
> Published: August 5, 2011
> 
> 
> QUETTA: 
> 
>  
> Afghanistan, as of March 2010, is the largest illicit opium 
> producer of the world, ahead of Burma, and Pakistan has a clinical role 
> to play in this statistic.
> In 2007, Afghanistan produced an extraordinary 8,200 tonnes of opium 
> (34% more than in 2006), becoming practically the exclusive supplier of 
> the world’s deadliest drug (93% of the global opiates market), according to 
> the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Afghanistan 
> Opium Survey 2007.
> (Read: “The Global Afghan Opium Trade â€" A Threat Assessment”)
> Being one of the world’s largest opium and heroin producer, the 
> labour demand needed to cater to this extensive poppy harvesting and 
> cultivation is met in an invariably peculiar way.
> Hundreds of madrassa students from Chaman and adjoining tribal 
> regions of Balochistan are engaged by Afghan farmers for poppy 
> cultivation in Afghanistan’s two major heroin-producing provinces of 
> Helmand and Kandahar for the past three months.
> These Pakistani madrassa students rush to the Afghan provinces with 
> strongholds of the Taliban, on lucrative money-making projects as soon 
> as their madrassas are closed in the first week of June for the 
> three-month summer holidays.
> “It is a source of easy money for madrassa students,” says Saifur 
> Rehman, a local social worker of Ziarat who is well acquainted with many in 
> the poppy harvesting workforce.
> “Each student makes around $15 to $20 a day,” Rehman reveals.
> “They are being paid in the local Afghani currency which has gained 
> strength against the Pakistani rupee in recent months.
> “Most students returned home with $1,500 to $2,000 after the 
> harvesting season last year.” Muslim scholars in Afghanistan remain 
> divided regarding the issue of poppy cultivation and its harvesting in 
> Afghanistan. A majority of these scholars declare poppy production 
> against the Islamic injunctions but a few of them disagree and argue 
> that it was permitted in Islam for medical purposes.
> However, all of them remain unanimous that heroin production is forbidden in 
> Islam.
> Despite the debates, no serious effort is being undertaken by these 
> scholars to prevent the students from engaging in poppy harvesting in 
> Helmand and Kandahar.
> (Read: Strengthen border controls around Afghanistan to end drug trade, UN)
> “A few of the workers even fell unconscious during harvesting since they 
> were not properly trained for the job,” Rehman says.
> Poppy harvesting became the main source of livelihood for many Afghan and 
> Pakistani families since the fall of the Taliban regime after the 
> US and Nato attacks in September 11, 2001.
> A 2007 UN report revealed that leaving aside 19th century China, 
> which had a population at that time 15 times larger than today’s 
> Afghanistan, no other country in the world had ever produced narcotics 
> on such a deadly scale.
> Published in The Express Tribune, August 5th, 2011.
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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