
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Myanmar is now the world's largest producer of opium, overtaking Afghanistan. That’s after the Taliban banned the cultivation of opium poppies, which can be used to make heroin.
Growing opium is illegal in both counties, but that isn’t stopping all farmers from growing the crop.
Yogita Limaye, the BBC’s South Asia and Afghanistan correspondent, explains how the ban has impacted farmers who previously depended on opium to survive. And Soe Win Than, editor of the BBC Burmese Service, tells us how corruption and political instability in Myanmar have contributed to the growth in opium production.
Email: [email protected]
4.7
1212 ratings
Myanmar is now the world's largest producer of opium, overtaking Afghanistan. That’s after the Taliban banned the cultivation of opium poppies, which can be used to make heroin.
Growing opium is illegal in both counties, but that isn’t stopping all farmers from growing the crop.
Yogita Limaye, the BBC’s South Asia and Afghanistan correspondent, explains how the ban has impacted farmers who previously depended on opium to survive. And Soe Win Than, editor of the BBC Burmese Service, tells us how corruption and political instability in Myanmar have contributed to the growth in opium production.
Email: [email protected]
1,836 Listeners
7,787 Listeners
402 Listeners
537 Listeners
953 Listeners
285 Listeners
356 Listeners
48 Listeners
57 Listeners
750 Listeners
479 Listeners
245 Listeners
251 Listeners
28 Listeners
170 Listeners