ILLEGAL DRUGS

Lunes, Oktubre 10, 2016

30 Show biz celebs monitored for drugs

By Cecille Suerte Felipe and Non Alquitran (The Philippine Star) | Updated October 10, 2016 - 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines – At least 30 entertainment celebrities believed hooked on illegal drugs are being monitored by the Philippine National Police (PNP), it was learned yesterday.
A new list of celebrities allegedly into drugs came from radio disc jockey Karen Bordador, who was arrested recently along with her boyfriend at a condominium unit in Pasig City for possession of party drugs, according to Chief Superintendent Oscar Albayalde, director of the National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO).
Actor Mark Anthony Fernandez, who was arrested in Pampanga last week with a kilo of marijuana, was in an old list, Albayalde said.
“We have an old and a new list, which we are now subjecting to a validation process (through) our intelligence units,” Albayalde said in an interview.
He said Senior Superintendent Eleazar Matta, NCRPO intelligence chief, would spearhead a workshop among intelligence officers of his five police districts and 38 police stations this week to evaluate and validate their lists of celebrities allegedly into drugs.
This developed as Philippine National Police chief Director General Ronald dela Rosa disclosed that the PNP lacked funds for the government’s intensified campaign against illegal drugs.
(source:http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/10/10/1632120/30-show-biz-celebs-monitored-drugs)

 

 

 

 



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Convicts tag De Lima as drug trade protector

By Delon Porcalla (The Philippine Star) | Updated October 11, 2016 - 12:00am
GO AHEAD, ARREST ME: Sen. Leila de Lima prays during a mass marking World Day Against the Death Penalty at the CBCP chapel in Intramuros, Manila yesterday. She dared authorities to arrest her on drug charges. EDD GUMBAN
MANILA, Philippines - She was fully aware of the illegal drug trade inside the national penitentiary when she was justice secretary and got a total of P10 million for her silence, a high-value inmate said yesterday, referring to Sen. Leila de Lima, whom he called the “protector” of convicted drug lords.
“Protector, ganun po ang dating. Wala po kaming ibang pinagkukunan ng pera (Protector, that’s how it was. There was nowhere else we could get money),” 36-year-old convicted kidnapper Jaybee Sebastian told the House committee on justice at the resumption yesterday of the hearing on the alleged illegal drug trade at the New Bilibid Prison (NBP).
He was replying to questions from Compostela Valley Rep. Ruwel Peter Gonzaga.
Sebastian, who dropped out of college after his third year in Customs administration, also disclosed he “directly” gave P2 million to the former DOJ chief, who told him to leave the box containing the money in the office of then Bureau of Corrections director Franklin Bucayu.
Sebastian said he gave the bulk or P8 million to De Lima’s Presidential Security Group aide Joenel Sanchez between March and May 2015, but which the close-in security categorically denied, claiming he “resigned” as PSG detail in March of the same year.
 (source:http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/10/11/1632455/convicts-tag-de-lima-drug-trade-protector)
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Israel willing to assist Philippines

 versus war on illegal drugs

by Rodel Alzona - October 8, 2016

 

ISRAEL is willing to work with the Philippine government in its campaign to rid the country of what it has termed as a widespread drug menace that is affecting millions of Filipinos.
Israel Ambassador Effie Ben Matityau said no country is spared of the illegal-drugs problem and that they are willing to cooperate and share their know-how in handling the issue with the administration of President Duterte.
“The illegal-drugs trade is global.  It is an industry that is present and being distributed worldwide. It is a constant struggle against its supply and infrastructure.  We are willing to share information and best practices. We can all learn from one another,” Matityau said.
He added: “Socially and economically, illegal drugs combine to make a disaster.  It is a major destabilizer of society.  It can destroy families.”

Matityau even said in the Middle East, the spread of illegal drugs can even be directly related to terrorist groups.
However, Matityau said the problem of illegal drugs differs from one country to another and that there is no singular solution to the menace.
“The nature of illegal drugs varies in every country.  You cannot copy what is being done in another country but you can learn elements, methodology and techniques from them,” he said.
Matityau said the best solution toward controlling the illegal-drugs problem is through education, as he believes it can act as a preventive measure in its use spread.
He also said to reduce the number of drug users, there has to be a deep level of cooperation between the government and non-governmental organizations.
Still, Matityau said they are able to control the drug menace from spreading in their country through good police work.
“We are a small society of just 8 million people. It is not a major epidemic. Still, law-enforcement operation is vital and gathering of intelligence is a serious issue,” he said, while adding that in principle they do not have a death penalty in their country even for terrorists.
According to Matityau, the youth in Israel are the most vulnerable to the drug menace.
“They young are very impressionable young people.  It is not a major percentage but it can get serious from time-to-time,” he said.
After drawing the anger of the international Jewish community, President Duterte has apologized for drawing a parallel to how Adolf Hitler massacred 6 million Jews during World War II and his plans to kill 3 million Filipinos who use or are involved in illegal drugs. 
(source:http://www.businessmirror.com.ph/israel-willing-to-assist-philippines-versus-war-on-illegal-drugs)

 

 

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PNP arrests Albuera Mayor Rolando Espinosa

By CNN Staff Philippines

Updated 12:33 PM EST Wed, October 5, 2016

Image result for albuera mayor



Metro Manila (Philippines CNN) -   A town mayor by President Rodrigo Duterte linked to the illegal drug trade was arrested by police Wednesday.
Rolando Espinosa, Sr., 54, mayor of the town of Albuera in the central Philippine province of Leyte was taken into custody and charged with illegal possession of dangerous drugs and firearms, following a warrant for his arrest issued by Regional Trial Court of the Supreme Court branch 14 on Tuesday.
No bail was recommended.
In the warrant of arrest, the mayor's son Roland "Kerwin" Espinosa was also ordered arrested. The younger Espinosa remains at large and police said he is believed to have fled to Malaysia.
Mayor Espinosa was among the local government officials identified by President Duterte as protectors of illegal drug activities.
The arrest came almost two months after authorities seized 11 kilograms of shabu worth ₱ 88 million (USD 1.8 million) and ingredients used for making bombs in a raid on Espinosa's house last August 10.
Prior to the raid, on August 2, Espinosa turned himself in to police and the Philippine National Police (PNP) headquarters in Camp Crame, fearing for his life as President Duterte announced a 24-hour ultimatum for him and his son to surrender or be shot.
Espinosa admitted to PNP Chief Roland Dela Rosa that Kerwin was involved in illegal drug activities in Mindanao, the group of islands in the central Philippines. The mayor also said his son obtained his supply of illegal drugs from drug lord Peter detained Co and from a local prison in the town of Abuyog in Leyte. Espinosa returned to his hometown in Cebu on August 16, closely monitored by police.
(source:http://cnnphilippines.com/regional/2016/10/05/PNP-arrests-Albuera-Mayor-Rolando-Espinosa.html)
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Linggo, Oktubre 9, 2016

DDB: Philippines has 1.8 million current drug users

The survey commissioned by the Dangerous Drugs Board estimates that 4.8 million Filipinos aged 10-69 years old used illegal drugs at least once in their lives

by:
Jodesz Gavilan
@jodeszgavilan
Published 2:45 PM, September 19, 2016                                        
Updated 3:13 PM, September 19, 2016
DRUG USERS. Alleged drug addicts and pushers wait to undergo drug tests following their surrender to authorities at Camp Karingal police station in Manila on June 22, 2016. Photo by Noel Celis/AFP













DRUG USERS. Alleged drug addicts and pushers wait to undergo drug tests following their surrender to authorities at Camp Karingal police station in Manila on June 22, 2016. Photo by Noel Celis/AFP
MANILA, Philippines — There are 1.8 million current drug users in the Philippines or 1.8% of the total population of 100.98 million, results of the Dangerous Drugs Board’s latest survey on the drug use situation in the Philippines show.
According to the 2015 Nationwide Survey on the Nature and Extent of Drug Abuse in the Philippines presented on Monday, September 19, the current drug use prevalence among Filipinos aged 10 to 69 years old is at 2.3%, or an estimated 1.8 million users.
Filipinos aged 10 to 69 years old comprise around 75% of the total Philippine population as of 2015.
Current drug users refer to individuals who are currently using or have used illegal drugs more than once from January 1, 2015, until February 5, 2016.
The 2015 figure is higher than the 1.3 million drug users estimated in 2012 and 1.7 million estimated in 2008.
Commissioned by DDB, the survey on national drug abuse situation was conducted by Resources, Environment and Economics Center for Studies Incorporated (REECS) from December 5, 2015, to February 5, 2016, among 5,000 respondents across the Philippines. It had a ±0.9 margin error. 
(source:http://www.rappler.com/nation/146654-drug-use-survey-results-dangerous-drugs-board-philippines-2015) 
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Drug lords killed, injured in Philippine jail

  • Posted 28 Sep 2016 20:28
  • Updated 28 Sep 2016 20:30

Police special action force personnel look on as funeral parlour workers carry the body of drug convict Peter Co, who was killed in a knifing incident inside the national penitentiary in suburban Manila's Muntinlupa City on September 28, 2016. (Photo: AFP/Ted Aljibe)
MANILA: A man accused by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte of being the nation's top drug trafficker was injured and a gang member killed during jailhouse knife attacks on Wednesday (Sep 28), authorities said.
Two other high-profile inmates were injured in the violence at Manila's notorious Bilibid National Penitentiary, from where Duterte has said much of the nation's illegal drug trade is run.
"It appears there was a knife fight," Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre said.
Duterte won the presidential election in a landslide in May after promising to kill 100,000 criminals as part of a campaign against illegal drugs.
More than 3,700 people have been killed in the less than three months he has been in office, prompting widespread criticism from Western governments and rights groups about a breakdown in the rule of law.
Duterte has railed against the criticism, vowing to do what is necessary to stop the Philippines from becoming a narco state.
He had targeted Bilibid prison as one of the hotspots for the drug trade and accused Peter Co, one of the men injured on Wednesday, as being the biggest drug trafficker.
On July 8 Duterte said Co ran a drug empire from inside his prison cell, supplying Manila and the main island of Luzon, with the help of corrupt officials in the previous government.
"So my appeal to them is, since they are beyond redemption, they can stop and commit suicide, because I will not allow these idiots to run their show. Not during my watch," Duterte told reporters.
Prison officials said the six men involved in Wednesday's violence were all top gang leaders who attacked each other at a maximum security wing of the jail, where they had been segregated as a security measure.
They did not explain how the weapons got into the jail.
The man killed was Tony Co, no relation to Peter Co but a member of the same prison gang and also a convicted drug trafficker.
Senator Leila de Lima, one of Duterte's most outspoken critics over the killings in the war on crime, accused the government of organising the knife attacks.
"It makes this government an assassin state," de Lima told reporters.
Both Duterte and Aguirre denied de Lima's allegation.
Duterte has in turn accused de Lima of being involved in the prison drug trade when she was justice secretary in the previous government, allegations she denies.
- AFP/hs
(source:http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/drug-lords-killed-injured-in-philippine-jail/3163508.html)
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Sabado, Oktubre 8, 2016

Int'l criminal court should probe Duterte's war on drugs

Former International Criminal Court official and Harvard law professor Alex Whiting says an urgent action from the court will send a strong signal to President Rodrigo Duterte.
by: Carmela Fonbuena
@carmelafonbuena
Published 9:36 AM, October 05, 2016
Updated 11:07 AM, October 05, 2016    



JOINED IN 2001. The court that investigates  genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity has jurisdiction on the Philippines. Photo from ICC web site
JOINED IN 2001. The court that investigates genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity has jurisdiction on the Philippines. Photo from ICC web site.

MANILA, Philippines – A former official of the International Criminal Court (ICC) called on the court to open a probe into President Rodrigo Duterte's war on drugs, arguing that the President's own words "are compelling evidence that the killings to date have been sanctioned at the highest levels."
"The time has come for the ICC to open a preliminary examination – the first step toward a full investigation – into allegations of the extrajudicial killings of as many as 3,000 suspected drug-dealers and users since Duterte became President last June," said Alex Whiting, a Harvard Law professor and former ICC official, in a blog posted on Just Security on Monday, October 3.
He said the killings are “committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population” and thus constitute crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute.
"The appalling announcement of President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines that he would like 'to slaughter' 3 million drug addicts in his country, much as 'Hitler massacred three million Jews,' (never mind that it was in fact six million), requires an immediate response from the International Criminal Court (ICC)," he added.
Whiting hopes that an urgent action from ICC can "contribute to the prevention of crimes."
"Opening a preliminary examination now does not commit the ICC to any ultimate course of action: it could subsequently decide or not decide to begin a full investigation. Starting an inquiry now, however, would unquestionably send a strong signal to Duterte that the day may come when he will have to answer for any crimes he has committed, ordered, tolerated or encouraged in the Philippines," Whiting said.
The ICC investigates genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. Whiting previously served the ICC to oversee all of its investigations.
ICC’s latest conviction was in March 2016, when it declared former Congolese politician Jean-Pierre Bemba guilty of knowingly commanding a militia that committed mass murder and rape against neighboring Central African Republic.
(source:http://www.rappler.com/nation/148243-icc-probe-duterte-drugs-war) 
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Duterte asks local

executives for help in drug war

By CNN Philippines Staff

Updated 09:18 AM PHT Wed, September 21, 20

CNN
Metro Manila (CNN Philippines) — President Rodrigo Duterte sought assistance from local government units on Tuesday in connection with the ongoing campaign to rid the country of the illegal drug menace.
Duterte, who attended a local governance event at the SMX Convention Center in Davao City, said he was surprised at the extent of the drug problem across the country — and said he was thinking of turning over a third drug list to governors and mayors so that they could check on it and find solutions in their territories.
(source:http://cnnphilippines.com/regional/2016/09/21/Duterte-LGU-help-drug-war.html)
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Miyerkules, Oktubre 5, 2016

Drug war stats: 1,138 killed, 17,319 arrested, says PNP

By Perfecto T. Raymundo (philstar.com) | Updated September 17, 2016 - 3:29pm
Filipino policemen secure an area as drug addicts and dealers voluntarily surrender at a police station in Manila. AP/Aaron Favila, File photo
MANILA, Philippines (Philippines News Agency) - The Philippine National Police (PNP) reported on Saturday that 1,138 drug personalities were killed nationwide following the implementation of “Oplan Double Barrel” from July 1 to September 17 this year.
The PNP also reported that 17,319 drug personalities were arrested in 18,832 police operations over the same period.
Oplan Double Barrel was launched by PNP chief Director General Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa to target both big-time and small-time drug pushers.
Headlines ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
Dela Rosa earlier reported an 80 to 90 percent decrease in the supply of illegal drugs in the country since the start of intensified drug operations.
He also advised policemen not to break the momentum of the war on drugs since President Rodrigo Duterte is expecting the drug menace to be eliminated six months since he assumed office.
(source:http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/09/17/1624693/drug-war-stats-1138-killed-17319-arrested-says-pnp)
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Shoot to kill? Duterte's statements on killing drug users

Human rights groups and foreign leaders are concerned that Duterte's statements are an 'apparent endorsement' of extrajudicial killings – an allegation the Palace vehemently denies
by: Katerina Francisco
@kaifrancisco
Published 5:30 PM, October 05, 2016
Updated 5:30 PM, October 05, 2016                                                                                     
STOP THE KILLINGS. President Rodrigo Duterte has been careful in his statements endorsing the killing of drug users, but human rights groups say he 'implicitly' supports killings in violation of due process. Photo by Rob Reyes/Rappler

STOP THE KILLINGS. President Rodrigo Duterte has been careful in his statements endorsing the killing of drug users, but human rights groups say he 'implicitly' supports killings in violation of due process. Photo by Rob Reyes/Rappler


MANILA, Philippines – It has been a common refrain between the government and its critics: the latter decries President Rodrigo Duterte's "shoot-to-kill" orders against alleged drug users, while the former denies there ever was such a thing.
As human rights groups, international media, and diplomats begin to take increasing notice of the number of drug-related deaths in the Philippines, it comes with criticism against what they perceive as the government's tacit endorsement of extrajudicial killings.
The harrowing images have been splashed across international news outlets: photos of slain people with their faces wrapped in tape, usually beside a cardboard sign saying: "I'm a drug pusher, do not emulate me."
But the relatives of some of the victims insist that their loved ones did not fit the profile of a drug user, or were simply at the wrong place at the wrong time.
One US senator said Duterte was endorsing "what amounts to mass murder." Human rights groups point out that vigilantes have grown emboldened because of Duterte's many statements defending and even promoting the killing of alleged drug users who fight back.
Even before the start of the campaign period for the May 2016 polls, Duterte had already promised to order the killing of criminals. But he emphasized that this should only be done if they fight back.
This caveat has been the government's consistent defense against criticism that it endorses extrajudicial killings.
Shoot to kill, DIY arrests
Duterte has long been vocal about his hardliner stance against illegal drugs. His campaign threats to kill drug users, he said, were not rhetorical.
Several months since the May polls, the Philippines is seeing the concrete evidence of that statement: thousands have been killed in Duterte's bloody war on drugs, some of them under questionable circumstances. (READ: 'Nanlaban sila': Duterte's war on drugs)
In May, shortly after winning the elections, Duterte said he would give security forces "shoot to kill" orders against those who resist arrest.
He also said he would offer million-peso bounties for the capture or death of drug lords.
But he was quick to add: "I'm not saying you kill them but the order is 'dead or alive.'"
The President has made several pronouncements in the same vein, issuing shoot-to-kill orders but immediately clarifying that it should only be done if the suspects resist arrest.
He has made this call not only to law enforcers, but to ordinary citizens. In June, during a thanksgiving party in Davao City, Duterte endorsed the idea of ordinary civilians engaging in do-it-yourself arrests.
"Kayong nandiyan sa neighborhood ninyo (Those among you in your respective neighborhoods), feel free to call us, the police, or do it yourself if you have the gun, you have my support," he said.
If a suspect resists arrest, "you can kill him," Duterte said.
The President added, "Only if your life is in danger, at lumaban, at may baril din at kutsilyo, barilin mo (and there is resistance and the suspect is armed with a gun or knife, shoot). I'll give you a medal."
(source: http://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/iq/148295-philippines-president-rodrigo-duterte-statements-shoot-to-kill-drug-war)
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  • ▼  2016 (10)
    • ▼  Oktubre (10)
      • 30 Show biz celebs monitored for ...
      • Convicts tag De Lima as drug trad...
      • Israel willing to assist Philippines  versus war...
      • PNP arrests Albuera Mayor Rolando Espinosa ...
      • DDB: Philippines has 1.8 million current drug use...
      • Drug lords killed, injured in Philippine jail Po...
      • Int'l criminal court should probe Duterte's war o...
      • Duterte asks local executives for help i...
      • Drug war stats: 1,138 killed, 17...
      • Shoot to kill? Duterte's statements on killing dr...
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