PH, US step up fight vs narcotics trade

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US anti-narcotics official: Falling demand in the US is driving the Latin American criminal gangs to look for new markets, particularly East Asia

In this file photo, US Undersecretary of State for the fight against drug trafficking William Brownfield attends a press conference in San Salvador, El Salvador, 08 February 2011. EPA/Roberto Escobar

MANILA, Philippines – The United States and the Philippines will step up cooperation in fighting the growing narcotics trade in the region, as the US’ top anti-drug envoy visits the country.

Latin American cartels are trafficking growing amounts of cocaine and methamphetamines to increasingly wealthy East Asian countries, US Assistant Secretary for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs William Brownfield said Wednesday, September 4.

Falling demand in the United States is driving the criminal gangs to look for new markets, Brownfield told a news conference in Manila.

“As the United States is increasingly successful in interrupting the flow of cocaine and methamphetamines from South America… these drug trafficking organizations will look for new markets, and some of those new markets will be in East Asia,” Brownfield said.

Cocaine consumption in the United States had dropped by more than 40% over the past 6 years, he said. At the same time, cocaine prices in Europe and East Asia have risen.

While methamphetamines are also manufactured by Asian gangs, Brownfield said coca leaves, the raw material for cocaine, are grown almost entirely in Bolivia, Peru and Colombia.

PH ‘exit point’ for narcotics

He said the US was stepping up cooperation with the Philippines, which was both a market and transit point for drugs and sat “at the opening to East Asia for a trafficking organization in Latin America”.

“As trafficking organizations for heroin in Afghanistan and Myanmar search for new markets in the United States, the Philippines will be at the point of exit across the Pacific,” Brownfield added.

Philippine anti-narcotics chief Arturo Cacdac said investigators were looking into the “Mexican” links of a Chinese gang arrested while allegedly manufacturing methamphetamine hydrochloride in one of the Philippines’ poshest housing enclaves in January last year.

“It’s possible that Latin American drug personalities are looking to the Far East as a market for drugs, not necessarily cocaine but also shabu,” he said, using the local name for methamphetamines.

The 1,800-member Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency has seized about 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds) of illegal drugs this year, he added.

Brownfield and Philippine National Police (PNP) Director General Alan Purisima, in a meeting Tuesday, September 3, also discussed more cooperation and technical assistance between the US and the Philippines, through the International Criminal Investigative Training Assistance Program (ICITAP).

The ICITAP has a field office in the Philippines, and is focused on 3 key projects: the Model Police Station, Maritime Police-Special Boat Unit, and the Southern Philippines Law Enforcement Development.

ICITAP also helped improve the PNP Crime Laboratory in Western Mindanao.

Brownfield is on the first leg of a 10-day, Asian tour to promote counter-narcotics, anti-corruption and human rights efforts. He was scheduled to fly to Myanmar later Wednesday and will also travel to Thailand and Japan. – With reports from Agence France-Presse/Rappler.com

 

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