Pubdate: Mon, 13 Feb 2006 Source: Philippine Star (Philippines) Copyright: PhilSTAR Daily Inc. 2006 Contact: http://www.philstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/622 Author: Ana Marie Pamintuan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) LOOKING THE OTHER WAY Sketches You have to hand it to the folks who ran that shabu tiangge or flea market in Pasig. They were savvy entrepreneurs, they had a sense of humor, and they knew whose palms to grease. Paying protection money was the only way that sort of enterprise could have thrived unmolested for a year, within spitting distance of the Pasig City Hall and the headquarters of the Eastern Police District. One police officer was reported to have explained that the illegal activity thrived because cops are generally reluctant to go into Muslim enclaves. There is no logic behind that explanation. No one is above the law, and all Filipinos regardless of religion need to have their communities protected by the government from lawless elements. If cops are scared to conduct regular patrols in a predominantly Muslim area, they should resign from the Philippine National Police (PNP). There is no room for cowardice in the police force. Neither is there any excuse for laziness, stupidity or negligence, if those are the reasons to be cited by Pasig police officers for their failure to detect the drug dens in the compound called Mapayapa (peaceful). More plausible than stupidity or negligence in this case, however, is tolerance of an illegal activity. The drug tiangge, with a carinderia called "shabu-shabu," thrived because certain Pasig police and local government authorities looked the other way in exchange for hush money. * * * At least other PNP units were on the job. Last week, anti-narcotics agents from Camp Crame raided the Mapayapa compound, confiscated shabu and drug paraphernalia and rounded up hundreds of suspects. How did that operation survive for a year? We have a barangay system precisely to deal with drug problems and facilitate the delivery of basic services at the community level. Barangay officials are being paid by Juan de la Cruz to keep close tabs on matters such as garbage disposal and the maintenance of peace and order in their respective communities. In carrying out their tasks, barangay officials coordinate with the local police and City Hall. There is no way activities such as illegal gambling, illegal vending, and drug dealing on the scale of the one in Mapayapa can thrive without the knowledge of barangay officials and local cops. Even if local government and police officers deny directly coddling drug dealers, failure to report an illegal activity or do something about it is an act of omission that must not go unpunished. Jueteng keeps coming back despite repeated crackdowns because there are public officials who cannot resist the lure of gambling payoffs. The same is true for illegal vending. If cops and local government officials did their jobs, you won't find vendors spilling into main thoroughfares or taking over areas that are supposed to serve as terminals for public utility vehicles. Even Metro Manila's traffic mess can be blamed on corrupt traffic enforcers, who look the other way when buses or jeepneys occupy all but one lane of a busy thoroughfare while waiting for passengers. You can see this clearly in certain spots along EDSA and in front of the Redemptorist Church in Baclaran, Paranaque. If authorities can look the other way when it comes to traffic, which inconveniences thousands of motorists throughout the week, they can certainly look the other way when it comes to a shabu tiangge. Everyone - customer and drug dealer alike - must look happy in those drug dens. If no one is complaining, why bother peaceful Mapayapa? * * * Camp Crame's Anti-Illegal Drugs Special Operations Task Force had other ideas and raided the compound housing 64 shanties in Barangay Sto. Tomas last Friday. Over 300 people were rounded up, including women and 56 minors who were turned over to the Department of Social Welfare and Development. You wonder how the Pasig police and barangay officials could have missed the special tiangge. No one was emerging from the compound, which charged a minimal entrance fee, clutching clothes from China or Louis Vuitton and Juicy Couture knockoffs. There were no foreigners asking around about South Sea pearls. Yesterday task force officials said they were looking into reports that three Pasig cops were often seen in the compound. Several barangay officials led by captain Jesus Viray are also wanted for questioning. Drug trafficking can be a capital offense, and any police or local government official found coddling drug dealers should face similarly heavy punishment. Many organized criminal activities in this country including illegal gambling, carjacking and smuggling thrive because of protection from those tasked to enforce the law and keep the public safe. At the height of the Abu Sayyaf kidnapping spree in Mindanao, local government and military officials in the affected provinces as well as at least one government negotiator from Manila were widely suspected to be in cahoots with bandit leaders particularly the late, unlamented Ghalib Andang, a.k.a. Commander Robot. * * * At least the Mapayapa raid yielded suspects, although the supposed principal operator is said to have escaped through some backdoor. Now why would a raiding team move in without first surrounding the entire shantytown, which sits on just 600 square meters of land? For now we're willing to credit this to usual police sloppiness. But suspicions of police collusion keep bubbling up in every drug raid. Surely you have noticed that most raids on shabu laboratories rarely net the operators themselves. The only ones who are not notified about an impending raid and who get caught are the poor janitors. Everyone else gets away, with the coddler making money from the priceless tip-off. Even when the operator is identified, he is rarely caught. The rare times that a drug trafficker is caught, he manages to waltz out of jail, even from maximum-security detention at PNP headquarters at Camp Crame. It's not just police and local government officials who are blinded by drug money. Even judges have come under fire for questionable acquittals and grants of bail to accused drug dealers. Foreign drug suspects seem to be particularly adept at knowing whose palms to grease. Once out on bail, they can quickly leave the country, courtesy of Bureau of Immigration personnel. The illegal drug trade is a lucrative one, and drug money can be irresistible. Unless those behind the Pasig drug dens are apprehended and quickly punished, the Mapayapa shabu tiangge could be just the start of a nationwide trend. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom