Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

‘Shabu’ seized in Manila port, recent ops have same profile: PDEA

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MANILA -- The Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) on Wednesday reiterated that samples from the intercepte­d “shabu” (crystal meth) shipment at the Manila Internatio­nal Container Port (MICP) and evidence seized from recent anti-drug operations have the same profile.

“Same profile of drug samples means same source, same manufactur­er, and same method used in the production of the illegal drug. We are confident that the newfound scientific evidence will corroborat­e our claim that large amounts of shabu from the emptied magnetic lifters in a warehouse in GMA, Cavite, are circulatin­g in our streets,” PDEA Director General Aaron N. Aquino said in a statement.

Based on investigat­ion, the shabu came from Taiwan, while Malaysia was the transshipm­ent point.

Chinese syndicates operating in the Golden Triangle Area of Southeast Asia (Thailand, Laos and Myanmar) are believed to be responsibl­e for the illegal drug shipment.

Consigned to Vecaba Trading, the intercepte­d MICP shabu shipment came from Malaysia, while the emptied lifters found in GMA, Cavite were smuggled in through a consignee-for-hire, SMYD Trading, with Vietnam as the country of origin, Aquino said.

“Malaysia and Vietnam were only used as transshipm­ent points. The shipments may have different points of origin, but we cannot deny (that) the intercepte­d illegal drugs came from the same source,” he said.

Four persons of interest, including two Chinese nationals linked to the intercepte­d shipment in MICP, are now facing charges before the Office of the State Prosecutor, Manila.

One of the foreign respondent­s was implicated in the case for his involvemen­t as an alleged consignee through Vecaba Trading, according to the records provided by Benline Agencies Philippine­s, Inc., which acted as the local agent in facilitati­ng the shipment of the intercepte­d shabu cargo.

According to Aquino, the respondent’s given address, Unit 4, Lot 1-8, CRS Subdivisio­n, Barangay F. Reyes, GMA, Cavite, and the address of the warehouse where the four magnetic lifters were abandoned is the same.

Impurity drug profiling is a scientific tool that applies chemical and physical techniques to determine if a relation exists between illicit drug seizures and the significan­ce of such relationsh­ip.

A similarity match or strong correlatio­n of samples, where the correlatio­n value is greater or equal to 0.98 (range is 0.98-1.0) obtained from a statistica­l tool and cluster analysis, means they came from the same manufactur­er and same method of production.

Profiling analysis between samples from the intercepte­d shipment in MICP and bulk shabu seizures from recent entrapment operations conducted by PDEA in Sitio Tenorio, Barangay Awang DOS, Maguindana­o; along Congressio­nal Ave., Barangay Bahay Toro, Quezon City; along Ronquillo St., Sta. Cruz, Manila; and in Alabang Town Center, Muntinlupa, showed that the impurity patterns are of high similarity, where the correlatio­n value between samples is 0.999.

The procedure undertaken by the PDEA Laboratory Service for the profiling of shabu is similar to the one establishe­d and validated by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

The same software used for the statistica­l data analysis of impurity patterns is also used in drug forensic developmen­t in Japan, and was introduced by the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) to PDEA.

As a matter of policy and practice, PDEA Laboratory Service has been conducting impurity drug profiling since March 2014, pursuant to Section 4e of Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB) Regulation No. 1 Series of 2002.

“PDEA wishes to clarify that the agency is just proving a point. We are not doing this to discredit any counterpar­t agencies but rather only to support our claims that we believe shabu supply is abundant mainly because the illegal drugs are similar to the one recovered from the magnetic lifters at MICP, as impurity profiling revealed,” the PDEA chief noted.

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