Pubdate: Sat, 31 Aug 2002 Source: Sun.Star Baguio (Philippines) Copyright: 2002, Sunstar Contact: http://www.sunstar.com.ph/affiliate.php3?locid=2 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1942 Author: Aileen Refuerzo Note: To read more about the Philippines latest anti-drug crusade visit http://www.mapinc.org/areas/philippines . VERGARA URGES COOPERATION IN CITY'S DRIVE AGAINST DRUGS MAYOR Bernardo Vergara has appealed anew to residents in the city to cooperate in the city's anti-drug abuse campaign by reporting suspected drug abusers and traffickers to the police. "If we will not do our part, then our children will continue to be victims of the drug menace," he added. The appeal was made after the National Bureau of Investigation expressed alarm over a recent development in the city's drug abuse situation which was reported during the City Peace and Order Council (CPOC) meeting on Wednesday. During the meeting, NBI Regional Director Rickson Chiong reported that a 16-year old student from one of the biggest high school campuses in Baguio was subjected to a drug test and subsequently tested positive of both shabu and marijuana. "To test positive for the abuse of the two substances is something. This situation is very alarming," Chiong said, adding that they believe that the condition is not confined to that high school boy alone. "The boy's condition could also be an indication that many others in that school are of similar condition." He, however, lamented that their investigations of similar incidents, were continuously hampered by the lack of cooperation among the residents, particularly the parents of the victims. "There is this stigma that parents are afraid to report to the NBI or police the condition of their children. But they have to understand that law enforcers are not trying to prosecute their children. We only intend to subject the children to a drug test to possibly get vital information that may be used in pinpointing the real culprits. The children are not the suspects, they're just victims," Chiong stressed. In view of this report, Vergara said the involvement of the schools and the Parents-Teachers Association should be enjoined in the campaign against illegal drugs. As such, the body agreed to include in the CPOC the head of the federation of PTAs in the city along with the school division superintendent as regular members to speed up interaction between government and private sectors. Another suggestion made is the passage of an ordinance for schools to adopt a policy that will require students to undergo periodic drug testing to determine the extent of the problem and to employ appropriate solution to it. Chiong said there is a sharp rise in the number of drug cases in the city although no specific figure was presented. Over at the City Anti-Drug Abuse Council, action officer Vice Mayor Betty Lourdes Tabanda said that their networking with the schools has been gaining headway as more schools now are submitting reports on suspected cases for action by their agencies attached with CADAC. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk