Afghan arrested as heroin kingpinheld in U.S. jail

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An Afghan identified last year by the Bush administration as one of the world's most wanted drug kingpins was in custody in New York on Monday.

A reputed Afghan drug lord who authorities say operated with the protection of the Taliban has been captured and faces charges that he tried to smuggle more than $50 million worth of heroin into the United States, authorities said.

Bashir Noorzai, who is on the U.S. list of most-wanted drug kingpins, was ordered held without bail at his initial court appearance in Manhattan. If convicted, he could face a maximum sentence of life in prison.

The full circumstances of Noorzai’s capture were not made public. Prosecutor Boyd Johnson told a judge that Drug Enforcement Administration agents arrested the defendant Saturday in New York, but he did not elaborate.

Noorzai, 44, wearing a full beard and a dark blue polo shirt, remained silent during the brief hearing. He was given a court-appointed attorney, David Greenfield, who declined to comment outside court.

Prosecutors say the smuggling attempt involved about 1,100 pounds of heroin.

Alleged to aid Taliban
U.S. Attorney David Kelley said that between 1990 and 2004, the defendant and his organization “provided demolitions, weapons and manpower to the Taliban.”

“In exchange, the Taliban allowed Noorzai’s business to flourish,” he said.

The Taliban protected Noorzai’s opium crops, its heroin laboratories in Afghanistan and Pakistan and its drug transportation routes out of the country, prosecutors said.

AFGHAN FARMER
An Afghan farmer collects the poppy flowers destroyed by authorities during an operation against the illegal poppy crops in Sanzeri village near Kandahar, Afghanistan on Tuesday, April 19, 2005. Authorities have destroyed about 20 hectares (48 acres) of illegal poppy crops in and around Sanzeri, a local police chief, said. (AP Photo/Noor Khan)Noor Khan / AP

Last year, the White House added Noorzai and nine other people and organizations to the list of most wanted drug lords. The White House gave Noorzai’s name as Haji Bashir Noorzai.

The Taliban militia had ruled Afghanistan until it was toppled by the United States in late 2001. Taliban-led militants are still operating along Afghanistan’s mountainous eastern border with Pakistan.

Kelley refused to comment on reports that the defendant has ties to the al-Qaida terrorist network.

“It’s not something that’s part of the case,” Kelley said.

Gen. Zaher Akbar, head of a U.S.-funded Afghan police unit charged with destroying Afghan opium crops, said Afghan authorities “appreciate the arrest of drug smugglers anywhere in the world, so long as there is proof against them and they are not just released the next day.”

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