The Philippine Star

Drug war success: Shabu prices up

- By JAIME LAUDE and CECILLE SUERTE FELIPE

The Duterte administra­tion is winning the war on drugs as evidenced by the price of shabu having gone up from P3,000 to P25,000 per gram due to scarcity of supply, Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Director General Ronald dela Rosa said on Friday.

Dela Rosa said the supply and demand for shabu have a direct effect on its price.

“During the first 100 days in office of President Duterte, I can say we are winning the campaign against illegal drugs,” he said in a television interview.

The PNP chief said the supply of shabu in the market has been reduced by 70 to 80 percent and the price of shabu sold by street level pushers continued to rise.

In the past, authoritie­s said a kilo of shabu cost P5 million. But based on Dela Rosa’s assessment, a kilo of shabu is currently valued at P25 million.

He said 1,523 drug personalit­ies have been killed in legitimate police operations since the PNP launched Oplan Tokhang and Oplan Double Barrel in July.

He said the anti-drug campaign also resulted in the surrender of 732,000 people and arrest of 22,000 others.

Dela Rosa admitted that the PNP is investigat­ing 2,000 deaths of suspected drug users and pushers.

Of this number, he said the PNP has so far investigat­ed 500 cases, solved 200 deaths while 300 cases have been filed against suspects who remain at-large.

Various groups have criticized the government as bodies of drug suspects continued to pile up in the streets.

Dela Rosa, however, said he is opposed to vigilante killings of drug personalit­ies.

Dela Rosa described the government’s drug war as challengin­g as he appealed for sustained public support for police to knock out the menace.

“It’s challengin­g. We need the support of the public in the campaign against illegal drugs. We cannot succeed without your help,” he said.

He said the drug war would continue until all barangays in the country are drug-free and government officials on drug watchlists are punished.

With the active participat­ion of the citizenry, Dela Rosa expressed confidence that the PNP would be able to knock out the drug menace in one year.

Extrajudic­ial killings

Former National Security adviser Jose Almonte has cautioned the Duterte administra­tion from creating conditions where justice would be defined by vengeance amid the bloody campaign against illegal drugs.

Almonte said the government’s drug war should shift to education and rehabilita­tion phase.

He said the President should gather public support, especially from those “who expressed misgivings and opposition to the government’s anti-drug thrust both here and abroad.”

“The Duterte government has been in office for only three months but has been getting criticism because of extrajudic­ial killings,” Almonte said during a roundtable discussion on identifyin­g the national interests of the Philippine­s at Malacañang on Wednesday.

“Beyond the legitimate concerns about extrajudic­ial killings, the Duterte government has initiated a radical national reform program. If it turns out successful, it will make the nation great,” he added. Almonte said if the President’s malasakit at pagbabago (concern and change) approach to governance would triumph, it would “lay the foundation for the formation of a new Filipino personalit­y and identity and build a strong and respected nation.”

“This will be the foundation of our internal strength – the bedrock of an independen­t foreign policy, which is neither for nor against anybody but equidistan­t to everyone,” Almonte pointed out.

He advised the Duterte administra­tion to handle its campaign against illegal drugs carefully.

For his part, Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian pushed for the creation of a task force to speed up the probe on extrajudic­ial killings.

Gatchalian, who spoke at the meeting of the Negros Associatio­n of Chief Executives in Bacolod City on Friday, admitted that the drug- related killings create a negative perception about the Philippine­s.

While the Duterte administra­tion is winning in the campaign against crime and drugs, Gatchalian said an improved foreign policy is needed and action should be taken against extrajudic­ial killings. –

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