Pubdate: Sun, 07 Sep 2003 Source: Daily Tribune, The (Philippines) Copyright: 2003 The Tribune Publishing Co., Inc. Contact: http://www.tribune.net.ph/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2973 Author: Louie Logarta Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Philippines DRUG SYNDICATES USING PHILPOST AS NEW MARKETING VEHICLE The government's continuing crackdown on illegal drugs -- spearheaded by the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency -- has created a host of problems for criminal syndicates, obliging them to institute radical changes in their distribution setup in order for them to satisfy the tremendous demand for their deadly product (by and large methamphetamine hydrochloride or shabu) by millions of unfortunate addicts all over the country. One sure sign that tremendous inroads are being made into the murky netherworld of the local drug lords is the fact that the price of shabu in the streets has skyrocketed in recent months, already way beyond the reach of your ordinary run-of-the-mill junkie. According to Director General Anselmo Avenido of the PDEA, shabu, which only used to fetch around P1,000 per gram from the neighborhood pusher a few years ago, can now be had for a whopping P4,000-P6,000 (depending on the perceived monetary capability of the addict). What this clearly indicates is that street shabu supplies are fast drying up due to the dismantling of several large laboratories in recent weeks and the confiscation by the police of several tons of raw and ready-for-distribution stocks. The resultant shortage of shabu in the open market has forced drug distributors who are in possession of the remaining stocks still being offered for sale to drastically cut down on their deliveries to clients for fear of being busted by the police through stoolies and to adopt a wait-and-see attitude until the situation cools down to their liking. In the traditional points of entry of illegal drugs into the Philippines such as the airports and piers, PDEA watchdogs are doing such an efficient job in monitoring the contents of incoming shipments that the smuggling of such cargos has dropped to a trickle. This, however, has not deterred cunning drug lords from exploring new avenues to allow them to continue with their lucrative enterprise where they had earned billions in the past and would continue to earn billions more if they could only surmount their current problems, as the PDEA rudely found out. Some weeks ago, during a surprise visit to the PhilPost's Dead Letter Office, Avenido was reported to have discovered small amounts of shabu and dried marijuana leaves in several packets of mail which was enough to indicate that criminal syndicates, in cahoots with corrupt personnel, could already be utilizing the country's postal system to expand their marketing network from the confinements of urban areas and allow them to reach people in outlying places. A brilliant idea indeed hatched up by criminal syndicates desperate to recover lost ground due to the relentless campaign being waged against them by the authorities. What better way to distribute their shabu than using the innocuous letter carriers of PhilPost. While they have been focusing too much of their attention prying into the private lives of officials of the Bureau of Customs, the Bureau of Internal Revenue and the Department of Public Works and Highways, it looks like the Transparency Group of Malaca'ang headed by Nick Conti may have overlooked other low-key government agencies that are similarly neck-deep in corruption. The PhilPost is one such agency. Believe it or not, the Postal Rank and File Employees Association (Prafea) claims there exists a P7-million weekly slush fund being spread around by syndicates operating inside who are involved in drug smuggling and gunrunning activities. Among those responsible for the increasing presence of criminals in the PhilPost system, according to the Prafea sources, is this official who was caught red-handed by National Bureau of Investigation agents receiving marked money from an extortion victim during an entrapment operation in a downtown hotel several years ago. The guy somehow managed to resurrect his career and in now acting as the go-between of the criminal syndicates and certain corrupt Philpost officials. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin