Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘Shabu’ smuggling: BOC men probed

- —STORY BY JULIE M. AURELIO, MARLON RAMOSANDDJ YAP

Customs employees who reportedly conspired with smugglers to bring a ton of crystal meth, or “shabu,” worth P6.8 billion, into the country will be investigat­ed, the Presidenti­al Anti-Corruption Commission said on Sunday. The discovery came a year after P6.4 billion worth of shabu from China slipped through the Bureau of Customs (BOC) at the Manila port.

The Presidenti­al Anti-Corruption Commission ( PACC) on Sunday said it would investigat­e reports that people from the Bureau of Customs (BOC) had conspired with smugglers to bring a ton of crystal meth, or “shabu,” into the Philippine­s.

The shabu smuggling was discovered by the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) on Friday, after narcs found four magnetic lifters with traces of the illegal drug in a warehouse in General Mariano Alvarez, Cavite province.

The discovery came three days after the BOC seized an abandoned freight container at Manila Internatio­nal Container Terminal (MICT) that yielded two magnetic lifters containing 500 kilograms of shabu worth P4.3 million.

Authoritie­s believed the magnetic lifters came in as one shipment from Taiwan.

Worth P6.8B

PDEA Director General Aaron Aquino said the shabu in the magnetic lifters found in Cavite was estimated to have weighed 1 ton, worth P6.8 billion.

The discovery came a year after P6.4 billion worth of shabu from China slipped through the BOC at the Port of Manila, also allegedly with the cooperatio­n of customs employees.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said on Sunday that the government was “working with foreign counterpar­ts” in the investigat­ion of the drug smuggling.

Roque said the latest incident was a sign that big-time drug trafficker­s were becoming bolder, as the local supply dwindled under pressure from the government through Presi- dent Duterte’s war on drugs.

In a statement, PACC Commission­er Manuelito Luna said the commission would investigat­e the “reported collusion” of corrupt people at the BOC with drug smugglers.

He said the PACC found the alleged collusion “very disturbing” and would “not take this sitting down.”

BOC officials to be summoned

The PACC, he said, would summon several people from the BOC for questionin­g.

Luna said the commission would not hesitate to recommend to the President “the firing of public officials found to be remiss in the performanc­e of [their duty] or, worse, acted in conspiracy with smugglers in facilitati­ng the entry of contraband.”

The PDEA’s Aquino said the shabu was already “circulatin­g in the streets” when the smuggling was discovered.

Lawmakers were aghast at the repeat of last year’s smuggling through the BOC that led to a Senate investigat­ion and a reorganiza­tion at the bureau.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, who tussled with BOC officials during last year’s investigat­ion, said on Twitter on Sunday: “God Almighty, keep the people in low-lying areas safe from the floods; may the flood wash away the ton of shabu that slipped through the Bureau of Customs.”

Magdalo Rep. Gary Alejano said on Sunday that the repeat of last year’s scandal at the BOC showed that Mr. Duterte’s war on drugs had failed to deal with the supply side of the country’s narcotics problem.

“While he has been very harsh on small-time users and drug suspects, the President never got angry [with] those who have been flooding the country with illegal drugs,” Alejano told the Inquirer by phone.

“It’s puzzling, and you can see that his war on drugs is really a failure,” Alejano said.

Foreign sources

“While thousands of Filipinos have been killed, the administra­tion has failed to [stem] the supply side. He did not even call out the foreign [sources] of [shabu], especially China. It was met by a deafening silence from the President,” he said.

Alejano noted that while President Duterte kept threatenin­g to kill drug users and pushers, he never cracked the whip on officials at agencies implicated in drug smuggling.

In fact, he said, Mr. Duterte defended former Customs Commission­er Nicanor Faeldon during last year’s Senate investigat­ion then transferre­d him to the Department of National Defense.

Caloocan Rep. Edgar Erice said on Sunday that the latest failure of the BOC and the PDEA to prevent drug smuggling into the Philippine­s should prompt the President to reconsider his approach to combating the drug menace.

Erice said countries that launched bloody drug wars only made the drug trade “more lucrative,” as the crackdown pushed prices up.

He said Mr. Duterte should consider replicatin­g the strategy of Portugal, which focused on rehabilita­tion of users and proved to be the “most successful in the world.”

Akbayan Rep. Tom Villarin said the late discovery of the shabu smuggling underscore­d the lack of coordinati­on among government agencies in the fight against the smuggling of drugs into the country.

“If big amounts of shabu [are] still being shipped into the country, it only means the drug operators are still scotfree,” Villarin said.

“It’s also a reflection of the failure of the [Duterte administra­tion’s] campaign against illegal drugs,” he said.

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 ?? —MARIANNE BERMUDEZ ?? MAGNETIC LIFTERS An agent of the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency secures as evidence the magnetic lifters used to smuggle a ton of “shabu” worth P6.8 billion at a warehouse in General Mariano Alvarez, Cavite province, on Friday. The law enforcers found only traces of the illegal drug in the magnetic lifters.
—MARIANNE BERMUDEZ MAGNETIC LIFTERS An agent of the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency secures as evidence the magnetic lifters used to smuggle a ton of “shabu” worth P6.8 billion at a warehouse in General Mariano Alvarez, Cavite province, on Friday. The law enforcers found only traces of the illegal drug in the magnetic lifters.

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