Probe sought on P462-M cocaine found at sea

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Sun, 17 Feb 2019 09:17:30 +0000

BLOCKS of cocaine

BLOCKS of cocaine

SURIGAO CITY – A lawmaker here has called on law enforcement agencies to look into the 77 cocaine bricks that washed ashore on Dinagat Island and Siargao Island in Surigao del Norte.

Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Ace Barbers said the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency and the Philippine National Police should look deeper into the recovered cocaine bricks that authorities said have a combined value of P462 million.

Barbers, chairperson of the House Committee on Dangerous Drugs, expressed concern that Dinagat Island is being used as a “dumping ground for illegal drugs by foreign and local drug syndicates.”

Police and local officials said 37 blocks of cocaine were fished out in Cagdianao, Dinagat Island last Tuesday and another 40 blocks were recovered on the coast of San Isidro, Siargao Island two days later.

PDEA-Caraga (Region 13) confirmed the bricks to be cocaine after subjecting the samples to laboratory tests on Friday.

Barbers said the recovered illegal drugs and in other places of the country could be linked to narco-politics, noting that the election period is approaching.

“It is an open secret in my province that some politicians are involved, directly or indirectly, in illegal drugs operations,” the lawmaker said, without elaborating. “It is not far-fetched to think that people involved in this have heightened their illegal activity and use their loot for the May 2019 elections,” he added.

Barbers said he has requested PDEA chief Aaron Aquino and PNP chief Director-General Oscar Albayalde to “establish the identities of those who dumped the cocaine blocks in the seas, what boat or ship was used, and who were the intended local recipients.”

The lawmaker noted that last week, some P5.4-million worth of cocaine was also found floating on the shore of Vinzons, Camarines Norte.

Chief Supt. Gilbert Cruz, PNP-Caraga director, said foreign drug syndicates usually use or attach global positioning system to their illegal cargoes, then dump these in Philippine shores to be retrieved later by local contacts. “We believe that the strings used to tie the cocaine blocks recovered in Dinagat and Siargao Islands broke loose, thus the blocks were washed ashore,” Cruz said. (PNA)

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