The Philippine Star

PNP: Drug war data used by Robredo ‘wild guess’

- By EMMANUEL TUPAS With Cecille Suerte Felipe

The data used by Vice President Leni Robredo in her assessment of the administra­tion’s war on drugs as a “massive failure” was based on a “wild guess,” the Philippine National Police (PNP) said the other day.

PNP spokesman Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac said the figure cited by Robredo that around three tons or 3,000 kilograms of methamphet­amine hydrochlor­ide or shabu worth P25 billion are being consumed every week was just an estimate made by police officials during an assessment of the extent of the drug problem in the country sometime last year.

In the gist of her report on her 18-day stint as co-chairperso­n of the Inter-Agency Committee on Anti-Illegal Drugs (ICAD) last November, Robredo described President Duterte’s anti-drug campaign as a “massive failure.”

The Vice President said the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) was able to seize only one percent of the total shabu supply in the past three years, citing the PNP’s assessment.

Banac, however, told “The Chiefs” on Cignal TV’s One News that the figure stemmed from one of their planning sessions where they made a ballpark figure that a drug user consumes about 0.15 grams of shabu per session.

Police officials then came up with a theory that a drug user consumes shabu twice a day and there are about three million users in the country.

“It’s even conservati­ve compared with the estimate of the PDEA,” Banac said, referring to a survey by the agency in 2016, which pegged the number of drug users at four million.

PDEA spokesman Derrick Arnold Carreon said conducting a survey on drug use is difficult as in most cases, nobody will admit that they are users or pushers.

Banac explained that there is no way of telling the exact amount of shabu and other illegal drugs in the country.

“Nobody can really tell, that’s why we just had a discussion to really have an appreciati­on on how big the problem is,” he said.

The police official contradict­ed Robredo’s assessment, noting that there are no more big clandestin­e shabu laboratori­es in the country since the President assumed office on June 30, 2016.

For Carreon, drug syndicates continue to smuggle narcotics in the country, but law enforcemen­t officials are doing everything to address the problem.

“They will smuggle and manufactur­e if and when the situation permits,” he said.

Leila agrees with Leni

Robredo has a deep understand­ing of the real situation of the drug menace in the country as indicated by the actionable recommenda­tions she submitted to the Duterte administra­tion to improve its campaign against the use and proliferat­ion of illegal drugs in the country, Sen. Leila de Lima said yesterday.

De Lima made the remarks after Robredo presented a 40-page report containing her findings and recommenda­tions to the government as a result of her 18-day stint as ICAD co-chair.

The senator pointed out that the Vice President’s report showed that the latter has a deep understand­ing of the real situation of the drug menace in the country.

“VP Leni’s ICAD Report is a well-researched, data-driven and completely objective look on the President’s war on drugs. She cited existing government data and based her conclusion­s on credible authoritie­s,” De Lima said.

“Her further statements and responses during the press conference on Jan. 6 reveal a deep grasp of the real drug situation, including the gaps and shortcomin­gs in the bureaucrat­ic structures and strategies,” she added.

Last Monday, Robredo gave the administra­tion a failing score in its ongoing war on drugs that has killed thousands of suspected drug offenders, mostly poor.

De Lima, a known critic of the administra­tion’s antiillega­l drugs campaign, also called out presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo for trying to discredit Robredo and her report despite not having any knowledge of its contents.

“It is hypocritic­al of Panelo to dismiss VP Leni because she didn’t take part in any ground operations during her 18-day stint when not even the President did so in all of his three and a half years in office,” De Lima said.

“That is precisely what is wrong with this government: all politics and bluster, no substance,” she added.

De Lima, the first lawmaker who initiated a Senate investigat­ion into the human rights abuses under the war on drugs, also pointed out that Robredo’s report is proof that the Filipino public suffers in the implementa­tion of the anti-drug campaign.

“In too much policticki­ng, the data were ignored. In setting aside the truth on the war on drugs, the drug lords win, the Filipino people lose,” the senator said in Filipino.

“A failure, indeed!” she added.

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