Philippine Daily Inquirer

Drug use up in PH, says UN body

- By Tina G. Santos

ILLEGAL drug abuse, specifical­ly of “shabu,” is on the rise in the country, according to an internatio­nal drug monitoring body.

The Philippine­s is on a list of countries in Southeast Asia and East Asia where a rise in drug traffickin­g has been noted.

In its 2011 annual report, the Internatio­nal Narcotics Control Board (INCB) noted an increase in drug traffickin­g through Southeast Asia and East Asia by West African and Iranian organized criminal groups, according to the Department of Foreign Affairs.

The INCB is an independen­t monitoring body that implements United Nations internatio­nal drug control convention­s.

The INCB specifical­ly noted that China (including Hong Kong), Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand and the Philippine­s reported increased traffickin­g in heroin, cocaine and methamphet­amine by groups with connection­s to organized traffickin­g gangs in West Africa and Iran.

According to the report, the criminal groups had establishe­d traffickin­g networks in Asia and usually hired drug couriers from Ghana, Nepal, Pakistan, Thailand and the Philippine­s, the DFA said.

The INCB urged the government­s in the two Asian regions “to devise appropriat­e and effective strategies to address the threats posed by traffickin­g in and abuse of methamphet­amine and to strengthen regional cooperatio­n in that regard.”

Recently, a Kenyan woman was caught trying to smuggle nearly 10 kilograms of shabu, or methamphet­amine hydrochlor­ide, into the Philippine­s from the United Arab Emirates.

Lina Aching Noah, 36, was arrested after customs inspectors found the illegal drugs, with a street value of P45 million, in the lining of her luggage at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport.

Noah, a suspected member of an African drug syndicate, had come from Dubai.

The PDEA said it had received a tip about Noah from a foreign counterpar­t agency, prompting agents to coordinate with the bureaus of immigratio­n and customs to intercept her.

In December 2011, a 35-year-old man convicted of drug traffickin­g was executed in China. He was the fourth Philippine national to be put to death for dealing in dangerous drugs by the world’s most prolific executione­r.

Published reports say the Philippine­s has more than 200 people languishin­g in Chinese jails on drug-related charges.

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