Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States: Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportRådgivning

Standard

Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States : Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. / Afsah, Ebrahim.

Economic Cooperation Organisation, 2014. 57 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportRådgivning

Harvard

Afsah, E 2014, Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States: Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Economic Cooperation Organisation.

APA

Afsah, E. (2014). Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States: Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Economic Cooperation Organisation.

Vancouver

Afsah E. Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States: Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Economic Cooperation Organisation, 2014. 57 s.

Author

Afsah, Ebrahim. / Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States : Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Economic Cooperation Organisation, 2014. 57 s.

Bibtex

@book{c35f1b0b9a8d4bfaa1dd54e009108614,
title = "Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States: Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan",
abstract = "This report evaluates the existing international, regional, and national legal landscape in order to identify possible legal initiatives furthering deeper regional cooperation the fight against organised crime, especially that involved in narcotics trafficking. During four extended trips to Tehran intensive consultations were held with the Unit{\textquoteright}s staff, supplemented by interviews with a great number of stakeholders in Tehran, Islamabad, Lahore, Kabul, Brussels and Vienna, listed at the end of this report. The original terms of reference started from the premise that the relatively modest degree of cooperation between the law enforcement and counter-narcotics agencies of the region was caused by a plethora of legal obstacles in the respective national penal and administrative codes, as well as an insufficient legal basis of regional collaboration.These premises could not be validated on the ground. The experts and stakeholders consulted unanimously agreed that the legal framework in the three countries most affected by the trafficking of opium –Afghanistan as the main producer, and Iran and Pakistan as the main transit corridors– is adequate and no legal obstacles to cooperation were identified. Rather, all collocutors agreed that the generally low level of trust that characterises relations between some member states, as well as entrenched corporate cultures inimical to the sharing of information and operational practices were the among the main reasons regional counter-narcotic cooperation remained anaemic.",
author = "Ebrahim Afsah",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
publisher = "Economic Cooperation Organisation",

}

RIS

TY - RPRT

T1 - Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States

T2 - Drug Control, Crime Prevention and Regional Integration between Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan

AU - Afsah, Ebrahim

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - This report evaluates the existing international, regional, and national legal landscape in order to identify possible legal initiatives furthering deeper regional cooperation the fight against organised crime, especially that involved in narcotics trafficking. During four extended trips to Tehran intensive consultations were held with the Unit’s staff, supplemented by interviews with a great number of stakeholders in Tehran, Islamabad, Lahore, Kabul, Brussels and Vienna, listed at the end of this report. The original terms of reference started from the premise that the relatively modest degree of cooperation between the law enforcement and counter-narcotics agencies of the region was caused by a plethora of legal obstacles in the respective national penal and administrative codes, as well as an insufficient legal basis of regional collaboration.These premises could not be validated on the ground. The experts and stakeholders consulted unanimously agreed that the legal framework in the three countries most affected by the trafficking of opium –Afghanistan as the main producer, and Iran and Pakistan as the main transit corridors– is adequate and no legal obstacles to cooperation were identified. Rather, all collocutors agreed that the generally low level of trust that characterises relations between some member states, as well as entrenched corporate cultures inimical to the sharing of information and operational practices were the among the main reasons regional counter-narcotic cooperation remained anaemic.

AB - This report evaluates the existing international, regional, and national legal landscape in order to identify possible legal initiatives furthering deeper regional cooperation the fight against organised crime, especially that involved in narcotics trafficking. During four extended trips to Tehran intensive consultations were held with the Unit’s staff, supplemented by interviews with a great number of stakeholders in Tehran, Islamabad, Lahore, Kabul, Brussels and Vienna, listed at the end of this report. The original terms of reference started from the premise that the relatively modest degree of cooperation between the law enforcement and counter-narcotics agencies of the region was caused by a plethora of legal obstacles in the respective national penal and administrative codes, as well as an insufficient legal basis of regional collaboration.These premises could not be validated on the ground. The experts and stakeholders consulted unanimously agreed that the legal framework in the three countries most affected by the trafficking of opium –Afghanistan as the main producer, and Iran and Pakistan as the main transit corridors– is adequate and no legal obstacles to cooperation were identified. Rather, all collocutors agreed that the generally low level of trust that characterises relations between some member states, as well as entrenched corporate cultures inimical to the sharing of information and operational practices were the among the main reasons regional counter-narcotic cooperation remained anaemic.

M3 - Report

BT - Fight Against Trafficking from/to Afghanistan within the Eco Member States

PB - Economic Cooperation Organisation

ER -

ID: 181575571