Pubdate: Sun, 12 Feb 2006 Source: Manila Bulletin (The Philippines) Contact: http://www.mb.com.ph/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/906 Author: Genalyn D. Kabiling Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) MASSIVE CRACKDOWN ON ALL METRO MANILA DRUG LAIRS ORDERED President Arroyo yesterday ordered a massive crackdown on all drug enclaves in Metro Manila as well as the imposition of harsher punishment for government officials or law enforcers involved in the illegal drug trade. The President issued the directive a day after police narcotics agents raided a "shabu" bazaar in a shanty neighborhood in Pasig City and rounded up as many as 300 suspects. "I order the police to clean up all drug enclaves in the metropolis, whether they are in the slums or the affluent neighborhoods. These are nests of ruin and criminality that should never be allowed to fester," she said in a statement. "Politicians or law enforcers who are involved in the drug trade or who neglect their duties should be dealt with sternly," she added. The President said the young victims should be rehabilitated while the hardened criminals must be prosecuted and jailed. Mrs. Arroyo also appealed to various sectors to help the government's campaign to eliminate the drug menace in the country, saying a "festering drug problem signals corruption, social decay and familial disintegration." "We must wield the consolidated power of all concerned agencies, the schools, the private sector and the church to bear upon this grim challenge," she said. Last Friday, around 150 policemen conducted a raid on some 100 shanties, which offered drug menus to clients, in barangay Sto. Tomas, Pasig City. They seized millions of pesos worth of shabu, several drug paraphernalia and assorted firearms from the "one-stop-shop" of the illegal drug during the raid. The shabu bazaar has reportedly been in operation for three years. On the economic front, the President yesterday projected the peso to further appreciate and break the R50 to the US dollar level in the coming weeks due to market optimism on government fiscal reforms. "The natural price of the peso is actually below ," she said in a roundtable discussion with government and private banking authorities in Malacanang. The peso surged to 51.48 to the dollar last Friday, its strongest finish since August 2002. The local currency began its dazzling run late last year due to swelling dollar remittances abroad and bullish investor confidence. Mrs. Arroyo also tried to assuage the concerns of exporters, who normally benefit from a higher exchange rate, and told them to plan ahead using the projected exchange rate. Reports earlier said Philippine merchandise exports grew by 3.9 percent to .22 billion in 2005, less than half the government's target of eight percent. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom