Pubdate: Thu, 16 Feb 2006 Source: Khaleej Times (UAE) Copyright: 2006 Khaleej Times Contact: http://khaleejtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/996 Author: Malou Mangahas Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) GETTING HIGH ON THE POOR MAN'S COCAINE IT'S simply incomprehensible, says the chief of the Philippine National Police. On many counts, the police raid last week on 'one-stop restaurants' for shabu (methamphetamine hydrochloride) nestled in a slum community in Pasig City, Metro Manila, is also absolutely incredible and tragic. The raid led to the arrest of 320 persons, including 59 minors, a four-month-old baby, and a pregnant 12-year-old. Clad only in t-shirts, shorts and slippers, they were seized from a 600-square metre compound that clusters about 40 shanties located half a kilometre away from the mayor's office. The baby's mother had a shot at shabu on the day of the raid, and in the ensuing melee apparently forgot that she had borne a child. The pregnant one was very thin but wore a big, bulging stomach. Apart from her, two other girls aged 16 and 17 were also in the family way. However, a majority of those apprehended were boys ranging from four to 15 years of age. Days later, the police reported that more than half of those arrested had tested positive for use of the prohibited substance that in other parts of the world goes by various slang names - speed, ice, glass, trash, crank, chalk, chicken feed. In developing countries like the Philippines, shabu is also typically described as "the poor man's cocaine." An amphetamine used in the form of a crystalline hydrochloride, shabu is often used as a nervous system stimulant and appetite suppressant. In many countries today, it ranks together with caffeine, alcohol and nicotine among the most pervasive, and perverse, stimulant drug of choice by users and pushers. Like virtual 'restaurants,' the shabu shops offered customers a menu of servings big and small, and with extra accoutrements. They could rent tooters and aluminum foil for sniffing the substance, and buy in small gram units. The 150-member police team swooped down on the shanties and in nearly every unit, seized packs of what looked like the prohibited powder, as well as peso bills and coins stashed in plastic bags. So many were arrested that the police ran out of handcuffs; some had their hands tied up with just straws and cords. In many ways, the entire village was a flea market for banned drugs. Four armed men guarded the narrow entrance to the compound that was introduced to customers by wooden signage stamped with the name "Shabu Shabu Restaurant." Instructions written in chalk set down house rules for customers: "No loitering here. Pickpockets are not allowed here. Those who will not pay will be punished." As per house rules, severe punishment awaits wayward customers, including "confinement in the toilet for one week" for first-time offenders; 1,000 pesos in fine for second-time offenders, and for third-time offenders, the dire warning of "you will be turned into a dart board." The arrested later told stories of how they managed to enter the compound by simply paying the 10-peso entrance fee per person, or 30 pesos for a five-person group. They are then allowed to choose any one of the 40 tiny shanties that stretches no more than foursquare metre in area. A girl, 12, who had lived in the compound for about 10 years says the operators refer to the customers as "scorers." Some of the shanties serve as homes to some families. Curiously, the drugs mall is called 'Sitio Mapayapa,' or peaceful village). By all indications, the shabu flea market thrives because it bursts with customers delivering the millions that line the pockets of the operators. In 2003, the United Nations Office on Drugs had estimated that Filipinos were the world's fourth biggest users of shabu. The illicit industry reportedly rakes in a low of 216 billion pesos (about $ 4.3 billion) and a high of 432 billion pesos (about $8.5 billion) in annual sales. The Philippines is the world's third largest shabu producer, after China and Myanmar, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. The upside to the story came yesterday from government and private sector social workers. "They were not customers. The children were being used as runners for different stalls," explained Director Marcelo Ele, chief of the Anti-Illegal Drugs Special Operations Task Force. Thanks for small mercies. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom