Sher Mohammed Akhundzada was appointed as Governor by the President
Hamid Karzai in 2001 and served until 2005. He identified agricultural projects to be implemented in
Helmand such as the excavation of a canal from the
Kajaki Dam to irrigate northern Helmand, construction of an intake on
Musa Qala River to irrigate the arable lands and generate electricity, and construction of an intake on
Helmand River in Kamal Khan to irrigate unproductive farms. Sher Mohammad was also deeply involved in the
production and smuggling of opium. He also led efforts to disarm the tribal militias in Helmand. This was supposed to pave the way for the creation of a
national Afghan army as the
United States had requested. However, in reality, Sher Mohammed used this to disarm rival tribes and take control of their territory and opium. This had the effect of weakening Helmand's defenses, leaving it vulnerable to attacks by the Taliban. In June 2005 Sher Mohammad's compound was raided by US forces, which claimed to have found a large stash of opium.
Britain—which had been designated the "lead nation" for counter-narcotics activities in Afghanistan—successfully lobbied for Sher Muhammad's deposition before deploying
ISAF forces to Helmand. Sher Mohammad Akhundzada acknowledged that his administration had indeed been storing opium in specially built compounds, but claimed that they had done so with the intent of handing it over to the Interior Ministry for disposal. Nobody believed in this explanation, and in December 2005, President Karzai reluctantly replaced Akhundzada as governor with
Mohammad Daoud. Although Daoud was well-regarded by the ISAF coalition for his charm, openness, and English proficiency, unlike Akhundzada he had no tribal base in Helmand and was forced to rely heavily on British support to assert influence. == Hazara Persecution in Helmand ==