Illegal drugs
>> Monday, July 9, 2012
EDITORIAL
It is alarming that
northern Luzon is now becoming the haven of illegal drug pushers particularly with
reports of numerous drug busts.
Reports have it that
some Pangasinan cities like Dagupan are now shipment points for illegal drugs
like shabu which are distributed even to remote areas like the vegetable town of Buguias in Benguet where shabu use is reportedly prevalent.
The menace is
spreading and the country is now becoming one of Asia’s top illegal drug spots.
Over half a century ago, Japan was Asia’s manufacturing center for
amphetamine-type stimulants, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime.
Around the 1960s the
operations moved to South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand, the UNODC reported.
Today, in its World
Drug Report 2012, the UNODC has identified three Asian countries that have
become the manufacturing centers for stimulants including “ecstasy” and shabu
or methamphetamine hydrochloride. These are China, Myanmar and the Philippines.
Former manufacturing
centers have not completely eradicated the drug problem, and they continue to
grapple with crime families or organizations. But Japan, South Korea and Taiwan
have invested in modernizing their law enforcement agencies, and have a
continuing effort to rid the agencies of scalawags. They have also invested in
improving the technological and human capability of other offices such as those
handling customs and immigration to foil drug trafficking.
Thailand under Thaksin
Shinawatra launched a brutal crackdown on drug traffickers. The problem – a
serious one in a country that is one of the world’s top tourist destinations –
has not been completely eradicated.
But the bloody
crackdown, criticized by human rights groups, broke up several drug rings and
neutralized their coddlers in law enforcement agencies.
The illegal drug
industry is big business, and drug dealers operate where they see inefficiency
and corruption in law enforcement. These are problems that the Philippines has
in common with China and Myanmar. All three countries have some of the world’s
toughest drug laws. China has shown that it applies the death penalty on drug
traffickers including foreign couriers, in accordance with its laws.
Yet huge profits from
illegal drugs, particularly those that can be synthesized in small
laboratories, push drug traffickers to take risks, especially when they enjoy
the protection of crooked law enforcers.
Only a sustained and
coordinated effort among several agencies can make a dent in the operations of
drug dealers. The effort must include a continuing purge in law enforcement
agencies. Police internal affairs units must be revitalized, with more powers
and resources. This should be given priority by an administration that rose to
power on an anti-corruption platform – or this country could yet emerge as the
top illegal drug pusher and user.
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