DRUG OPERATIVES uproot marijuana at the border of Sadanga, Mountain Province and Tinglayan, Kalinga. |
BAGUIO CITY – Folks in
remote towns in the Cordillera where marijuana thrives say it is actually
eradication drives that are making the illegal plants proliferate.
When
marijuana plants are uprooted and carried away, seeds fall off and sprout and
within a few months, mountains are lush green and the plants are ready for
harvest, locals say.
But according
to the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency in Cordillera, marijuana is purposely
grown in the region even if residents and officials in remote areas like
Tinglayan, Kalinga maintain it is actually eradication operations by government
that is contributing to proliferation of the banned plant.
“Marijuana is
done like high-value agriculture, PDEA Cordillera director Gil Castro said
after authorities discovered another marijuana plantation along the boundary of
Mountain Province and Kalinga August 6.
Anti-drug
operatives recently overran four plantation sites covering a total of 6,150
square meters, said Brig. Gen. R’Win Pagkalinawan, Cordillera police director.
Castro said
while eradication operations are intensifying, the PDEA and the Philippine
National Police are conducting an investigation "to find out who should be
held criminally or administratively liable for intentional cultivation."
Sadanga Mayor
Gabino Ganggangan has also confirmed marijuana plantations along his town's
borders with Tinglayan, saying people from Buscalan and Bugnay barangays have
been encroaching into the town's land to plant marijuana.
In 2018, then
Kalinga Gov. Jocel Baac confirmed the proliferation of illegal marijuana
plantations particularly in Tinglayan but cited socio-economic reasons behind
such.
The illegal
agricultural activity has long been there, Baac said then, even when Fidel
Ramos — later defence minister and then president — was chief of the Philippine
Constabulary.
"Time pa
(niya) sinusunog na yan," the former governor said. "The problem is,
everytime they burn or uproot, kumakalat naman ang buto. Pag umulan, according
to residents, tutubo ulit.”
The
government should instead provide good roads and irrigation systems in those
villages so that people would instead grow legal crops, Baac said then.
Baac disputed
allegations all local villagers within Mount Chumanchil complex in Tinglayan
are involved in growing marijuana. "Basta na lang daw
tumutubo," he had said.
Marijuana
plantations have also been reported in Sagada, Mountain Province and remote
towns of Benguet like Kibungan and Kapangan among others.
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