Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jul 2003 Source: Sunstar Bacolod (Philippines) Copyright: 2003sSunstar Contact: http://www.sunstar.com.ph/affiliate.php3?locid=1 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1718 PUBLIC BURNING, SHAME CAMPAIGN IN ANTI-DRUGS DRIVE MANILA - President Arroyo on Wednesday ordered weekly public burnings of illegal drugs seized by the police, as well as the publication of mugshots of arrested drug dealers. "Let us put a face and identity to these people and get the public involved in hunting them down," Arroyo said in a statement that detailed fresh initiatives in her highly publicized war on illegal drugs. She ordered police to publish pictures, names and aliases, passport numbers, immigration records and addresses of "every personality suspected to be involved in a drug case." Arroyo said the campaign has led to "discoveries of large stocks of shabu (metamphetamine hydrochloride, a stimulant also known as "ice") as a result of the cooperation of the public." She ordered narcotics police "to set aside a regular day of the week for the public burning of drugs, raw materials or precursors so that these cannot be recycled for the illicit market by unscrupulous law enforcers. "I want a strict accounting of drugs confiscated and drugs destroyed to the last gram," she said. "Once charges are filed covering a drug stash, the latter must be immediately destroyed, save for the amount needed to be used as evidence in court." Police announced late last month that nearly 16,000 people, including a number of alleged Chinese and Japanese drug dealers, had been arrested over the past year. Arroyo in June announced a heightened anti-drug campaign that she said was inspired by the crackdown launched by Thailand's Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The Thai leader declared a war against drugs in February and proclaimed the results as a success despite an outcry from human rights groups over the draconian methods used. Police said at least 70 percent of all crimes in the country were drug-related. They said drug users number up to two million in a population of 80 million. Authorities have said 175 international and local drug gangs operate in the country. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek