Philippine Daily Inquirer

Soldiers told: Open suspect shipments

- By Julie M. Aurelio and Germelina Lacorte @Team_Inquirer

President Duterte has ordered the military contingent to be assigned to the Bureau of Customs to forcibly open all shipments suspected of containing illegal drugs and other contraband­s.

In a speech in Cagayan de Oro City on Wednesday night, the President said his instructio­ns were for the soldiers to “do it randomly” or “forcibly open everything.”

“They will really do it. You know, that’s why I like military men,” he said.

Mr. Duterte said he was planning to purchase more Xray machines to help in the detection of smuggled narcotics and other contraband­s at the corruption-ridden agency.

P11-B ‘shabu’ smuggling

Earlier, he ordered the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s to take over the operations of the agency following the P11billion shabu smuggling controvers­y that hounded it.

Malacañang, however, said a “status quo” prevailed at the agency pending the issuance by the President of a formal order.

While stressing the integrity of his former appointees, former Custom Commission­ers Nicanor Faeldon and Isidro Lapeña, the President said the shabu shipment might have slipped past the ports due to the large vol- ume of shipments that needed to be examined every day.

The President justified the military takeover at customs, with retired general Rey Leonardo Guerrero as the new commission­er.

“I will not sit as President if you make me very helpless. They’re saying, the move to take over the Bureau of Customs is militariza­tion of the government bureaucrac­y. Correct!” he said.

Ex-military officers

“Some are saying [that] not all of us are corrupt. That’s right. But how come the ‘shabu’ (crystal meth) shipment slipped through?” he asked.

Mr. Duterte said he had appointed former military officers to his Cabinet because they were the ones who delivered.

“I do not have anything against the bureaucrac­y, but the bureaucrac­y [takes a long time to deliver]. It will take you forever [to implement projects] because they’re fond of debating. In the [middle] of a disaster—fire, flooding, they’re not there because they’re drinking,” he said.

But he said the military also served as “utility boys,” who, when ordered to dig the road, would really do it.

“In Boracay, if not for military men [Interior Secretary Eduardo] Año and [Environmen­t Secretary Roy] Cimatu, would Boracay be cleaned up?

“In Marawi, if not for [Housing Secretary Eduardo] Del Rosario, a military man from Davao, would [the rehabilita­tion] be that fast? Would the money still be there?” he said.

 ?? —JIGGER JERUSALEM ?? MILITARYOR­DER President Duterte speaks to agrarian reform beneficiar­ies in Cagayan de Oro City.
—JIGGER JERUSALEM MILITARYOR­DER President Duterte speaks to agrarian reform beneficiar­ies in Cagayan de Oro City.

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