Pubdate: Mon, 17 Apr 2000 Source: Straits Times (Singapore) Copyright: 2000 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Contact: Forum Editor, 390 Kim Seng Road Singapore 239495 Fax: 733-2690 Website: http://straitstimes.asia1.com/ Author: Luz Baguioro, Philippine Correspondent PHILIPPINE DRUG PROBLEM 'OVERBLOWN' THE drug problem, classified as public enemy No. 1 by the Philippine National Police (PNP), is not as menacing as the drug-enforcement authorities have portrayed it to be. General Panfilo Lacson, the PNP chief, said that the claim by former drug-busters that 1.7 million Filipinos were hooked on illegal drugs -- particularly methamphetamine hydrochloride -- was baseless. The estimate that the drugs trade had a yearly turnover of 250 billion pesos (S$10.6 billion) was also unfounded, he told foreign correspondents recently. "Those figures were not validated and have no basis. Actually, they were bloated deliberately to justify previous requests for a bigger budget," Gen Lacson said. He added that there were only between 300,000 and 400,000 drug users and peddlers throughout the country, although it had become a major transshipment point for cocaine and other banned substances which were being moved illegally to Western countries. An unrelenting crackdown had left only about 2,000 of the country's 42,000 villages "drug affected", meaning more than 1 per cent of the residents in a village were drug users or peddlers. Gen Lacson also revealed that the police had put a number of politicians under surveillance on suspicion that they "coddled" drug lords, but have so far gathered "no solid information" against any of them. While the drug called "ice" was the preferred substance from the late 80s to the 90s, he said there was now a growing preference for Ecstasy. Police links have also been forged with China and Hongkong, from which the basic ingredients for making "Ice" were being smuggled. Last year, the authorities arrested 37,305 drug peddlers, including users, seized illegal substances with an estimated value of 2.7 billion pesos and cracked 20 drug syndicates. They filed 22,287 drug-related cases, of which 600 have been dismissed for a host of reasons. These include the illegal arrests of suspected drug peddlers, lack of documentary evidence and the failure of government witnesses to appear in court. The PNP chief said the Justice Department was still trying to determine how many of the cases eventually led to convictions. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck