EXTRA-judicial
killings are almost a no-brainer in Drug Wars. Governments could haul
off all suspected couriers and street peddlers and foot soldiers to
court, appropriate millions for such a program, and still they
haven't scratched the surface of it. Not until the big boss is
wasted. It's either you launch that war or you don't. You stop it or
you carry on. Once a Drug War is green-lighted, the killing machine
is on. People will fall. That's how it goes, sadly. But the mayhem
doesn't necessarily solely coming from the government. Reading
Facebook posts, it seems many people believe the shots are all
emanating from one gun. Killings of the lower-ranked sicarios and
lieutenants are not a monopoly of government forces. I don't
understand why some people blame the carnage, that now claims to
about 3,000 kills in just a few months, solely on Philippine
president Rodrigo Duterte—just because he adapted such a program as
his campaign platform.
Let's
look at other Drug Wars somewhere. Sure to cross our mind is
Colombia.
Major
reason why Colombian president Cesar Gaviria wasn't interested in
cocaine king Pablo Escobar's surrender during the Medellin Cartel's
onslaught in 80s to early-90s? Escobar had to be eliminated. That's
the only way to stop the war. At the time of Escobar, the Medellín
Cartel was responsible for the murders of hundreds of people,
including government officials, politicians, law enforcement members,
journalists, relatives of same, and innocent bystanders. The cartel
even worked with guerrilla groups such as the M-19, to process and
protect illegal drugs. When conflicts emerged between the Medellín
Cartel and the guerrillas, the cartel also promoted the creation of
paramilitary groups. This while Gaviria's Bloque de Búsqueda (Search
Bloc) went on relentless pursuits of the Cartel's men. So people,
innocents and those involved with drugs, fell just like that.
Meantime,
other killings were charged to the rival Cali Cartel, ran by the
Rodríguez Orejuela brothers, Gilberto and Miguel. Some were also
pointed to Los Pepes, a paramilitary group at war with Communist
guerrillas. Most members of Los Pepes were previously persecuted by
Escobar, many members were allegedly rival drug traffickers. Los
Pepes were allegedly funded by the rival Cali Cartel and the CIA.
Many from the police force and military organization are under the
payroll of both cartels.
It
is no different in the Philippines. But it is a lot harder to bring
down drug kingdoms in the Philippines due to the fact that the
hierarchy/ies don't have a face or poster boy—like Escobar or the
Cali guys. Although I strongly believe that most drugs in the
Philippines come from The Golden Triangle drug realm (Myanmar, Laos,
Thailand), some authorities connect it with some Mexican groups,
particularly the Sinaloa Cartel, and a handful of Asian crime
syndicates.
Early
last year, an alleged Sinaloa Cartel operative named Horacio
Hernandez Herrera was arrested in Manila, and local authorities later
confirmed that his organization has attempted to gain a foothold in
the country's domestic meth trade. Shortly after Herrera was
detained, police in the Philippines seized 84 kilograms of high-grade
"shabu" crystal meth worth $9.4 million and arrested three
suspects with alleged links to the Sinaloa Cartel. Chinese crime
syndicates have long been key players in the Philippine drugs trade.
Much of the meth in the Southeast Asian nation, says some reports,
comes from Guangdong province in southern China, where syndicates
exploit lax controls in the chemicals industry to procure ingredients
needed to make the synthetic drug. Both these chemicals and the
finished product are then smuggled across the Philippines’ porous
borders and into market, where the shabu — as it is known locally —
can go for less than $20 per gram. A cheaper merch is Ya ba, tablets
containing a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine. It costs $3 to
$4 per pill.
Shabu
and Ya Ba could be credible alternatives to cocaine or meth. A
decent-to-good-quality gram of coke at street price runs $60-$80,
occasionally $90. In some areas, it could fetch slightly lower. On
average, the price of crystal meth for a 1/4 of gram is $20; 1/2 of
gram is $40 and 1 gram is $80. As in Colombia or South America,
“drugs processing” are mostly done by people living below the
poverty line. They also somehow protect their “underground” way
of living. And they are also the first ones to fall when drug wars
ensue. Bringing each and everyone of them (in case other forces
haven't gotten to them yet) to court is possible but not really
doable since this entails logistics and budget. It is gung ho.
Drugs,
as in heroin (Southeast Asia's main illicit export), are most
frequently brought to the United States by couriers, typically Thai
(in case of heroin) and US nationals, travelling on commercial
airlines. California and Hawaii are the primary US entry points for
Golden Triangle heroin, but small percentages of the drug are
trafficked into New York City and Washington, D.C. While Southeast
Asian groups have had success in trafficking heroin to the United
States, they initially had difficulty arranging street level
distribution. However, with the incarceration of Asian traffickers in
American prisons during the 1970s, contacts between Asian and
American prisoners developed. These contacts have allowed Southeast
Asian traffickers access to gangs and organizations distributing
heroin at the retail level. But that'd be another story.
Truth is, illegal drugs is a problem. A huge problem. Somehow it had to be contained. What's going on in the Philippines is sad though—all the killings. Yet I feel it will face its eventual stoppage soon. The country isn't Colombia or Myanmar where raw materials for illegal drugs emanate—so we don't really expect the world's powers to create such huge meddling as they did in South America during the Reagan/Bush I years. We just have to see it ends. Yet the truth remains, illegal drugs will always be there—ruining lives and families. I don't want to be personal about it on this little blog though. So I digress.
No comments:
Post a Comment