Oversupply of drugs?

Tempo Desk
3 Min Read

 

robert roque

HAVE you ever won­dered why there seems to be a never-ending sup­ply of methamphetamine hydrochloride or shabu in Metro Manila nowadays?

And why are we see­ing news reports of large volumes of the illegal drug worth millions of pesos getting seized from several suspected pushers and car­riers?

Is it possible that some personnel from the gov­ernment’s anti-drug agen­cies who are supposed to fight its proliferation have turned their back on the law and now conspired in its circulation?

I still have faith in our laws and in government. There may be a few bad eggs out there but a great majority of officials in the administration can still be trusted to strictly follow and enforce our laws and not bend them to suit their needs.

According to the Philip­pine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA), the drugs seized from recent raids in Metro Manila matched the drugs found in mag­netic lifters intercepted at the Manila International Container Terminal (MICT) and are connected to the empty magnetic lifters found in Cavite last August 10. PDEA officials came to this conclusion after con­ducting an “impurity drug profiling” on the samples seized from the raid.

PDEA Director-General Aaron Aquino said there is reason to believe that drugs supposedly kept inside four magnetic lift­ers found in Cavite that slipped past authorities have already flooded the streets.

Although empty when discovered, Aquino be­lieves that the four mag­netic lifters contained P11 billion worth of shabu af­ter detection dogs sniffed them out. He thinks the two magnetic lifters they seized at the MICT were supposed to be delivered to the same warehouse in Cavite and the drug ring had them “sacrificed” as an “offering” to make authorities believe that they had seized the entire shipment.

With poor man’s cocaine flooding the streets of Met­ro Manila, he adds, its price per gram has dropped from P6,800 last July to P1,400 at present.

Former officers from the Bureau of Customs (BOC), Philippine National Police (PNP) and Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) have been impli­cated in the simultaneous probes conducted by the House of Representatives and the Senate. They are thought to have facilitated the release of the lifters’ shipment since they were all still in active service when it arrived in Manila.

While those involved should be charged and jailed, I am also calling on all people from government not to get involved in illegal drugs in any way. Countless lives and families have already been destroyed due to drugs. Have a heart.

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