- •State educational institution of higher professional education
- •Reading and understanding customs texts
- •Contents
- •Part I. Reading for information
- •I. Headlines
- •II. The plan for rendering an article.
- •Article I Russians Get ‘Gold Medal’ for Cyber Fraud
- •Article II Female Discovered in Trunk of Car at u.S./Canada Border
- •Article III cbp Officers Intercept Marijuana Smuggling Attempt in New York
- •Article IV Border Patrol Stops Drug Smuggler, Seizes Meth on I-5
- •Article V Siemens Managers Admit Bribing Russian Officials
- •Article VI Drug Police Seize Cannabis Garden
- •Article VII Afgan Drug Lords Bypassing Central Asia
- •Article VIII Bank Clients’ Data Faces Scrutiny
- •Vedomosti
- •Article IX Branding: a crucial defence in guarding market share
- •Article X uk government backtracks over bribery
- •Article XI Globalisation needs no defence – it needs to be questioned
- •Article XII Breaking the habit
- •Part II. Reading for analysis Text I
- •The custom of customs
- •1. Whole numbers
- •2. Decimals
- •Text II
- •Anything to declare?
- •Text III
- •Full exposure
- •Text IV
- •Counterfeiting and piracy: crime of the 21st century
- •Дозажигался…
- •Counterfeiting, the Internet and the postal dilemma
- •Text VI
- •Call of the wild
- •Russia Backs Pact to Save Wild Tigers
- •Text VII
- •Trafficking drugs into Europe
- •The cocaine business
- •Text VIII
- •Sniffy customers
- •Text IX
- •Classification of goods
- •The Harmonized System Convention
- •Text XI
- •Customs valuation
- •Text XII
- •Meeting the challenges of the 21st century
- •Part III. Supplementary reading not guilty
- •Smuggler
- •Two coats
- •In the driving seat
- •At the customs office
- •Dutch cigarettes
- •A present from strasbourg
- •Coping with smuggling in the middle ages
- •A true story
- •A great deal of trouble
- •Travels with charley in search of america
- •The word
- •Tests Test 1 Coke and the Colonel’s wife
- •Test 2 On the border
- •Test 3 Drug Detector Dogs in Customs work
- •Test 4 Lexical – grammar test
- •Bibliography
Article VII Afgan Drug Lords Bypassing Central Asia
REUTERS
DUSHANBE, Tajikistan – Afghan drug lords are smuggling more heroin through Iran to Europe, easing the burden on a traditional trafficking route through the former Soviet republics of Central Asia, Tajikistan’s drug control chief said in an interview.
With a long, leaky border with Afghanistan and lawlessness inherited from a bloody 1992-97 civil war, Tajikistan has long been a haven for drug smuggling out of Afghanistan, which producers nearly all of the world’s opium, used to make heroin.
Rustam Nazarov, head of Tajikistan’s State Drug Control Agency, said that picture was now changing as Afghan drug runners turn their attention to an alternative route through Iran.
“Starting last year drug smugglers are now exploring, with a large degree of success, a new supply route for Afghan drugs to the Russian market,” he said. “The new route goes through Iran, the Caucasus region and then on to Russia.”
Russia, which is a huge market for Afghan heroin with its population of 142 million, is a key stop in the route linking Afghanistan with lucrative Western European markets.
Tajikistan, which the International Crisis Group said last year was on the road to “failed-state status,” has been increasingly under strain to combat trafficking, a worry for the West concerned with stability in Central Asia.
Nazarov said Iran, already long used by Afghan smugglers, has become particularly popular after relative stability returned to northern Afghan provinces that border Tajikistan.
That has forced poppy farmers to focus more on the opium growing heartlands in the violent south of the country and look for ways of bypassing Central Asia for smuggling drugs to Europe.
“The amount of drugs seized [in Tajikistan] in 2009 is noticeably smaller than in 2008,” Nazarov said, adding that some 4.5 tons of illicit drugs were intercepted in 2009.
Tajikistan says it seizes two-thirds of drugs passing through its territory, but some Western diplomats are skeptical, saying the number is closer to as low as 10 percent.
In Afghanistan, persuading farmers to ditch the opium poppy – which fuels the Taliban insurgency – in favor of other crops such as wheat is a major objective for NATO and its allies.
Last year, the United States spent about $300 million on agricultural projects in Afghanistan, and projected spending this year is more than $425 million, not including separate funds from U.S. military coffers handed out by troops in the field.
For tiny Tajikistan, the shifting trend represents a relief, yet Nazarov said he was bracing for another tough year ahead.
“Unfortunately, the drugs situation in our country and the region as a whole solely depends on the situation in Afghanistan,” the anti-drugs chief said.
“Only when there is law and order in Afghanistan will there be law and order in our country,” he said.
Task 1. Read the article.
Task 2. Find figures in the article to complete the information.
Russia, which is a huge market for Afghan heroin with its population of ________, is a key stop in the route linking Afghanistan with lucrative Western European countries.
Some ________ of illicit drugs were intercepted in _____.
It seizes _________ of drugs passing through its territory, but some Western diplomats are skeptical saying the number is closer to as low as ________ percent.
Last year, the US spent about _________ dollars on agricultural projects in Afghanistan, and projected spending this year is more than ________ dollars.
Task 3. Find the expressions in the article that mean:
being unable to continue because of a lack of money
the central part
to stop having
a group of people that attempts to control a situation in the country
money
preparing for
Task 4. Match 1 – 7 to a) – g) to form partnerships used in the article.
1. Afghan a) market
2. trafficking b) status
3. drug c) drug lords
4. a huge d) drugs
5. failed-state e) projects
6. illicit f) runners
7. agricultural g) route
Task 5. True or false?
Afghan drug lords are smuggling more heroin through Africa to Europe.
Tajikistan has never been a haven for drug smuggling out of Afghanistan.
The new route goes through Iran, the Caucasus region and then on to Russia.
Iran has become particularly unpopular after relative stability returned to northern Afghan provinces that border Tajikistan.
Task 6. Over to you. What is the key message of the article?
Task 7. Provide your attitude to the problem.