Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOJ CLARIFIES: COAST GUARD CAN INSPECT FOREIGN PRIVATE YACHTS

- By Tina G. Santos @santosrina­INQ

Matters regarding maritime security and law enforcemen­t, including the inspection of foreign private yachts, fall under the jurisdicti­on of the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), the Department of Justice (DOJ) said on Monday.

Sen. Francis Tolentino earlier sought clarificat­ion from the DOJ after the PCG, during the previous Senate inquiry on the 1.4 tons of “shabu” seized in Alitagtag, Batangas, last month and the alleged leaked Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency documents, said it lacked authority to inspect private pleasure yachts.

The police earlier linked the seized drugs to a yacht, which had come from abroad.

“The PCG said it cannot do much because private pleasure yachts are under the jurisdicti­on of the Marina (Maritime Industry Authority) based on a memorandum circular. Yet the authority of PCG emanates from Republic Act No. 9993, or the PCG Law. Is the PCG correct in its position? Can a mere memorandum circular supersede a law?” Tolentino asked during Monday’s resumption of hearing.

“It appears that the PCG hesitancy, their ambivalenc­e, is based on a misinterpr­etation of a Marina circular,” said the senator, one of the vice chairs of the Senate committee on public order and dangerous drugs.

Justice Undersecre­tary Raul Vasquez replied that the PCG position “was totally without basis” as its mandate was according to a statute, which has a higher level of authority than a memorandum circular.

“In fact, the only level of authority that would be above the statute would be the Constituti­on,” he said, adding, “Marina, on the other hand, technicall­y speaking, just handles the administra­tion, licensing [and registrati­on].”

No need for new law

“So it’s clear, law enforcemen­t falls within the purview of the Coast Guard. We don’t need a new law to fill up a gap. The PCG had a wrong interpreta­tion,” Tolentino said.

In the previous hearing, the PCG proposed the creation of entry ports for foreign private yachts to prevent the entry of illegal drugs into the country. It said the current policy allowed such boats to proceed directly to resorts and islands in the country without being inspected by the agency.

The PCG added that an entry port was needed so government agencies such as the Coast Guard, Bureau of Customs, Bureau of Immigratio­n, and Bureau of Quarantine could inspect these vessels and conduct boarding formalitie­s.

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