Pubdate: Mon, 28 Nov 2005 Source: People's Journal (Philippines) Copyright: 2005 People's Journal Contact: http://www.journal.com.ph/contactus.asp Website: http://www.journal.com.ph/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3381 Author: Alfred Dalizon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SHABU LOSING GROUND TO 'GREEN GOLD' - PDEA THE green gold that is marijuana is fast making a comeback on the local drug scene, prompting anti-narcotics officials to intensify the search for and destruction of cannabis fields in the country. "We are intensifying our efforts to stop the massive production of marijuana in the country. This is a search-and-destroy operation," said Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency chair Anselmo S. Avenido, Jr. Marijuana remains a favorite among drug addicts in the country due to its availability and much cheaper price. A kilo of marijuana costs P2,500 in the underground market compared to shabu which fetches as much as P5,000 a gram. Avenido said the PDEA is supervising the marijuana eradication operations with the assistance of the Philippine National Police, the Armed Forces and local government units. Nearly 100 traditional marijuana sites have been identified by the PDEA and the PNP across the country but the bulk are located in the Cordillera Region, which remains to be the top cannabis producer in the Philippines. Both Avenido and PNP Anti-Illegal Drugs Special Operations Task Force commander Director Marcelo S. Ele, Jr. said they have reports that addicts have been turning to marijuana due to the scarcity of shabu traced to the success of the government in dismantling dozens of shabu laboratories and warehouses. The PDEA and the PNP have succesfully destroyed more than a dozen shabu factories and storage places in Metro Manila and other parts of the country over the past three years. But marijuana plantations continue to exist in the mountains where fertile soil and the cold climate help the plant grow abundantly. Ele said even New People's Army rebels have turned to marijuana cultivation to augment their meager resources following the government's success in cutting them off from their foreign sources of funds. "We believe they (NPA) are resorting to marijuana cultivation as a means of livelihood. This has been their practice over the past few years," Ele said. Ele cited their latest operation in the Cordillera Region where four big marijuana plantations were found being maintained by suspected NPA guerrillas. This week, AIDSOTF and PDEA operatives destroyed more that P100 million worth of marijuana in four plantations in Benguet. Ele said the plantations were believed being cultivated by members of the NPA's Sandatahang Pampropaganda Yunit operating in Benguet, Ilocos and Mountain Province. He identified the leader of the rebel group as one Ka Bileg. "We believe that these marijuana plantations are one of the major sources of funds of the CPP-NPA. We think they planted the prohibited crop," said AIDSOTF deputy director Senior Supt. Erasto Sanchez. - ---