The Philippine Star

President Rody’s media ‘invite’ a welcome developmen­t

- * * * Email: babeseyevi­ew@gmail.com BABE ROMUALDEZ

Alot of media people including our friend Tony Lopez, the chairman of the Manila Overseas Press Club (MOPC), welcome the president’s order to allow members of the media to cover the anti-illegal drugs operations of the Philippine National Police. Bringing in the media at the onset of the operations will show that the government wants transparen­cy, which is what people have been clamoring for with regard to the government’s war against illegal drugs which has bred allegation­s of rubouts and extra judicial killings.

“Opening up” will also be good for the internatio­nal community so that they will also see that the government does not have an “official policy” of killing drug offenders – a perception that unfortunat­ely has escalated following the killing of teenage boys Reynaldo de Guzman, Carl Angelo Arnaiz and Kian delos Santos. Malacañang has expressed deep concern about the killings of these boys, with the president himself saying this could be an effort to sabotage the government’s relentless campaign against illegal drugs. People close to the president aver that there seems to be a conspiracy to discredit the administra­tion’s efforts to curb the illegal drugs trade.

If one could remember, the president has raised the possibilit­y of a “drug war” between drug syndicates who resort to extrajudic­ial killings to eliminate their rivals in the trade. It is not also farfetched that rogue cops are also using legitimate police operations to “silence” witnesses and their so-called “alpha” or assets who could also implicate these dirty cops. No doubt, the proposal by Senator Ralph Recto for body cameras for policemen and dashboard-mounted cameras for patrol cars will help document the police operations and provide proof in case of allegation­s of extra-judicial killings or summary executions.

Everyone knows that one of the major reasons why the illegal trade has also proliferat­ed is because of the protection offered by corrupt police officials for bigtime drug lords who turn out to be politician­s who want to control the illegal drug trade in their local fiefdoms. Studies have also shown that a spike in criminal activity – among them drug traffickin­g and kidnapping – happens during election season because these dirty politician­s need to raise campaign funds.

No question the problem has become so deeply entrenched in this country, spreading out into many cities and provinces because our porous borders have allowed drug trafficker­s to ply their lucrative trade over the decades – coupled with the complicity of corrupt employees and officials of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) as seen in the P6.4-billion shabu shipment from China that is now the subject of a Senate investigat­ion.

Hopefully, the Senate investigat­ion – while it is primarily in aid of legislatio­n to find the loopholes in BOC laws and regulation­s regarding importatio­ns, shipment and apprehensi­on of suspect cargo – will help ferret out the truth regarding the issues that have been raised about drug smuggling and traffickin­g, including allegation­s that the family of the president is involved.

However, our senators should be mindful that the proceeding­s do not turn into a circus because when the hearings become a spectacle, then we only make a fool of ourselves before the internatio­nal community. Inane questions and prepostero­us assumption­s – for instance, claiming that a tattoo is proof of membership in an internatio­nal criminal organizati­on like the Chinese triad – is the kind of negative publicity that the internatio­nal media loves to pick up and broadcast all over the world.

Neverthele­ss, the allegation­s of corruption in the BOC are very serious, not to mention disturbing because of the amount of money involved – P6.4 billion just for that shipment. A lot of people also agree with the comments of Senator Richard Gordon that China is “shabulizin­g” the country because majority of the drugs coming into the Philippine­s are sent by Chinese syndicates.

Even US Ambassador Sung Kim has also expressed concern with the situation, urging China to take more action in stopping the entry of illegal drugs in the Philippine­s. As the American diplomat noted, most of the precursors (chemicals) that go into the production of illegal drugs (like shabu) come from China.

A recent report from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) on the impact of criminal syndicates on the security and economic developmen­t of Southeast Asian countries revealed that the “regional illicit drug market is estimated to be worth over $30 billion per year. UNODC research shows that Southeast Asia hosts the world’s largest methamphet­amine market, as well as the largest opium and heroin market. While the business models of the two drugs are quite different, production of both generally takes place where state institutio­ns are weak and chances of intercepti­on are low. The drugs are then trafficked to meet demand in large population areas.”

The UNODC report further noted that organized crime groups in China are “also producing and traffickin­g significan­t quantities of methamphet­amine into and through the region,” turning Southeast Asia into “the world’s largest methamphet­amine market” today. Even North Korea is reportedly turning into the manufactur­e and traffickin­g of “crystal meth” or “ice” to compensate for the economic sanctions imposed by the UN, with the base ingredient – phenylacet­ic acid – said to be smuggled from China.

One welcome developmen­t that could beef up the country’s effort to combat smuggling and illegal drug traffickin­g is the plan by Finance Secretary Sonny Dominguez to equip the BOC with patrol boats through a loan from European financial institutio­ns. The US Drug Enforcemen­t Agency intelligen­ce unit is actively providing our authoritie­s with extremely vital informatio­n to combat this menace – informatio­n that admittedly has been very instrument­al in numerous PNP drug operations.

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