Sun.Star Davao

Our so-called ‘ports of shabu’

- - Clarence Paul Oaminal

November 1, 2018 SINCE the creation of man and the establishm­ents of government, its (government’s) rise and fall has always been a question of leadership and never of membership.

Assigning military men to the Bureau of Customs was experiment­ed from the time by former president Ferdinand Marcos and even by former president Cory Aquino.

This was repeated by former presidents Fidel Ramos, Joseph Estrada and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo when they assigned military men, who were completely ignorant of the Tariff and Customs Code, to head the agency on the belief that they are immune from corruption.

President Duterte did so when he came to power in 2016, appointing coup plotter Nicanor Faeldon assisted by his fellow Magdalo officers as Deputy Commission­ers. During their watch, upon orders of the President, to guard our ports from the entry of shabu came tons of shabu slipping into our ports.

The then Bureau of Customs (BOC) commission­er Faeldon was sacked by the President (he has been transferre­d as deputy administra­tor of the Office of Civil Defense and later as director of the Bureau of Correction­s).

He then appointed another alumnus of the Philippine Military Academy, his trusted police general Isidro Lapeña. The result was the same. Tons of shabu again slipped into our ports, flooding our streets with street pushers busy selling them and users so happy sniffing them.

This resulted in our police officers having their hands full in going after sachets of shabu that could have been prevented from being distribute­d had the presidenti­al appointees been loyal and sincere to God and country.

It is a myth, this belief that putting military men in our ports (now Coast Guard) is the easy solution. The reason is simple: it is not the clothes or uniforms that make a man upright; rather, it is his core values. And no academy or institutio­n could mold such man because honesty, integrity and dedication to God and Country is inborn. It must be second nature to the man.

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