Philippine Daily Inquirer

DRUG SITUATION WORSENING? 2 AGENCIES DON’T DISAGREE BUT . . .

- By Jaymee T. Gamil @JGamilINQ

The two law enforcemen­t agencies fighting the war on drugs do not disagree with President Duterte’s assessment that the drug situation has worsened, but they have their own interpreta­tion of what the Chief Executive’s statement means.

In an interview with reporters on Tuesday, Police General Oscar Albayalde, the Philippine National Police chief, said Mr. Duterte’s assessment was “a big challenge [for] us.”

“It’s not actually a surren- der, but a frustratio­n that despite our efforts, there is still a massive volume of drugs in the country,” Albayalde said.

Unceasing drug traffic

Internatio­nal drug syndicates have not stopped bringing narcotics into the country, Albayalde said, citing the recent intercepti­on of “shabu” (crystal meth) worth P1.8 million at the Port of Manila.

Albayalde, however, insisted there were gains from the drug war, citing “the improvemen­t of peace and order,” and dropping crime rates.

For the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA), the worsening drug problem is just a “perception” brought about by bigger and more numerous operations.

“With the recent billions of pesos worth of illegal drugs seized by [the] PDEA and other law enforcemen­t agencies, the President’s and even the ordinary people’s impression that the [drug situation is] worsening is [actually] normal,” PDEA chief Aaron Aquino said in a statement on Wednesday.

“From the point of view of [the] PDEA, the billions of peso seizures of illegal drugs is a positive indicator that the government is very effective in carrying out its war against illegal drugs,” he said.

“What is important is that authoritie­s are able to prevent these illegal drugs from flooding our streets,” Aquino said.

Suppliers, too

The PDEA also belied criticisms that the drug war targeted the poor only, underscori­ng recent operations that led to the arrest of suppliers operating from plush apartments in exclusive residentia­l subdivisio­ns, and the pursuit of narcopolit­icians and errant policemen.

Earlier, Aquino said the PDEA had actors, judges, prosecutor­s and journalist­s on its watch list.

During a news conference on Wednesday, PDEA spokespers­on Derrick Carreon debunked criticisms that the drug war coddled Chinese drug lords, given the Duterte administra­tion’s pivot to China.

“If we look at our data, 60 percent of our foreign nationals arrested are Chinese,” Carreon said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines