‘Mt Province major transhipment point of illegal drugs in Cordillera’
>> Friday, January 29, 2016
Drug use becoming
rampant
By Angel Baybay
BONTOC,
Mountain Province – The Provincial Peace and Order Council here has set
measures to curb proliferation and use of illegal drugs in the province after
provincial police officials said selling and use of the prohibited items was
becoming rampant.
This, as the province remains a transhipment
point of marijuana coming from other provinces in the region, said Supt. MarcialFa-ed
who heads the provincial police Investigation Division during the PPOC meeting
Wednesday.
In the last quarter of last year, at least
five people were reportedly nabbed transporting more or less seven kilos of
dried marijuana leaves.
“We admit having received reports regarding
some youths using and selling illegal drugs particularly shabu,” said Fa-ed,
adding no arrests were made relative to the use and sale of prohibited drugs
but they have intensified surveillance to identify those involved.
The revelation caught some by surprise but
not PPOC chairman Gov. Leonard Mayaen who said the admission only validated
earlier information intimated to him by reliable sources. “That piece of
information only corroborates what was told me by some people. I was informed
that the use of shabu is becoming more prevalent among students,” the governor
said.
With this, the PPOC agreed to focus on the
problem before it spreads to alarming proportions. “We have to act now or else
it would be late. I will be calling for a meeting particularly among law
enforcers so that we can map out our next steps,” Mayaen said.
As agreed, the law enforcers shall provide
the technical and manpower support while the PPOC will provide the financial
backing.
Mayaen asked personnel of the provincial
Scene of the Crime Operations to list equipment that would enable them make
tests on suspects involved in drug-related crimes and accidents.
Provincial SOCO head Chief Insp. Emilia
Calixto bared they will be asking for
procurement of drug testing kits and important gadgets.
New OIC provincial police director Cornelio
Comila called on the people to cooperate with law enforcers so that the problem
will be given solution the soonest possible time.
“The fight against drugs and other lawlessness
could only be achieved through teamwork. Please help us,” said Comila who
assumed his new position last week. Shabu, is slang for methamphetamine.
It is usually in the form of an odorless
crystal or crystalline powder, white in color and bitter in taste.
As revealed by a recent United Nations
report, shabu is the most used illegal drug in the Philippines.
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