Philippine Daily Inquirer

BARANGAY EXECS TO FACE RAPS FOR ABSENCE OF DRUG COUNCILS

- —ALLANNAWAL

DAVAO CITY— Tens of thousands of village officials nationwide face charges for failing to activate local drug abuse councils, which serve as the government’s eyes and ears and now considered as a key component in the Duterte administra­tion’s war on drugs.

The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) said officials of up to 9,000 villages across the country would be charged with derelictio­n of duty.

Ricojudge Janvier Echiverri, assistant interior secretary for legislativ­e and external affairs, said the village officials had been warned, through letters signed by then Interior Undersecre­tary Catalino Cuy, against failure to activate the councils.

“But they did not heed the warning,” Echiverri said.

Last chance

According to Echiverri, acting Interior Secretary Eduardo Año would give the officials a last chance to put the councils to work to avoid being charged.

Anytime this week, Echiverri said the DILG would issue a memorandum compelling the village officials to activate the councils in 30 days. Copies of the memorandum would be sent to the erring officials.

If the local drug abuse councils were not activated after 30 days, the village officials would be charged with derelictio­n of duty and suspended, according to Echiverri.

Aaron Aquino, Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) chief, cited data that showed 9,000 villages nationwide, where the drug trade thrives, had no functionin­g drug abuse councils.

Most of the villages are in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Aquino said.

First line of defense

The local drug abuse councils, known by their acronym Badac (Barangay Anti-Drug Abuse Council), are considered the first line of defense against the drug trade in communitie­s because village officials were supposed to have firsthand informatio­n on drug suspects and users in their areas.

The number of villages without functionin­g Badacs represents nearly 30 percent of the country’s 42,000 villages, according to Aquino.

Echiverri said the role of Badacs in the war on drugs was crucial as they not only monitored the movement of drug suspects but were also expected to enforce programs to prevent drug abuse.

The councils were also expected to implement community-based programs for the rehabilita­tion of drug addicts, he said.

Cuy, who now heads the Dangerous Drugs Board, said villages with either “disorganiz­ed or nonfunctio­nal Badacs” were also known to be drug hot spots.

“Most likely, these barangays have officials involved in illegal drugs,” said PDEA’s Aquino.

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