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Duterte's Drugs War Chief Struggles to Stop Meth From China

Duterte's Drugs War Chief Struggles to Stop Meth Flow From China

(Bloomberg) -- The chief enforcer of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs acknowledged the difficulty in halting a surge in methamphetamine imports from China despite a campaign that has claimed thousands of lives.

“We do not guarantee that we will win this war,” Philippine National Police chief Ronald dela Rosa said in an interview in his Manila office Thursday. “Win or lose, at least we have done something to address the problem.”

Duterte's Drugs War Chief Struggles to Stop Meth From China

Ronald dela Rosa

Photographer: Veejay Villafranca/Bloomberg

Duterte has faced strident criticism from the U.S., the United Nations and the European Union since being sworn in last June over his efforts to tackle drug addiction -- a policy that has proved popular at home. The Philippine police say about 2,600 people have been killed in police operations against drug traffickers, while human-rights groups label some 4,700 other murders as “extra-judicial killings.”

In a speech Thursday, Duterte again rejected international criticism of the drug war, demanding the EU “not impose your, whatever it is, your values and everything because we hate you for being a hypocrite.”

Despite being a key source of drugs, China has used the issue to draw closer to Duterte and improve ties with the Philippines. Policy makers in Beijing have supported the drugs war and offered to help, with anti-narcotic cooperation among agreements reached during Duterte’s trip to China last year.

Dela Rosa said on Thursday that police in the Philippines are coordinating with counterparts in China. Most of the five clandestine laboratories dismantled in Duterte’s first six months in office involved Chinese citizens, he added.

Recent data provided by the Philippines Drug Enforcement Agency showed that the largest quantities of methamphetamine seized had been trafficked directly from China, according to Jeremy Douglas, regional representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Methamphetamine imports into the Philippines rose to 2,495 kilograms in 2016, more than four times the amount in 2015, he said.

While better law enforcement had contributed to the rise seen in the data, other factors like treatment admissions, price, and purity trends related to methamphetamine indicated a growing demand for the drug in the Philippines, Douglas said.

“As long as market demand is not addressed, increases in law enforcement activities at a street level alone won’t be able to improve the situation,” he said. “We recommend addressing the market through treatment and prevention, and addressing organized crime targeting those that run the business.”

Dela Rosa, 55, rose from the police ranks in Davao City, where Duterte served as mayor for more than two decades. He said the campaign targeted both street-level pushing as well as high-value targets like drug lords, drug traffickers, financers and protectors.

‘Passing Grade’

He rated the drug war a success on the basis that police so far had accounted for 1.3 million people involved in the drug trade across the country, around 70 percent of 1.8 million target set by the Dangerous Drugs Board.

”On the demand side, we can say we have a passing grade of 70 percent,” Dela Rosa said. Another measure of success, he added, was that methamphetamine prices had almost quadrupled to as much as 4,000 pesos ($80) a gram.

Dela Rosa rejected claims by international groups such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty international that the drug war had resulted in thousands of extrajudicial killings.

Duterte's Drugs War Chief Struggles to Stop Meth From China

Ronald dela Rosa

Photographer: Veejay Villafranca/Bloomberg

“I just want to set the record straight," Dela Rosa said. “The 7,000 extrajudicial killings being reported by some sectors is wrong. We don’t want to propagandize, we don’t want to deodorize ourselves, we just want to set the record straight so that the public will not be mislead by this false reporting.”

Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phelim Kine said in an email that thousands of victims never saw a lawyer or had a proper trial.

“This is an evisceration of constitutional guarantees of due legal process that has inflicted profound harm on the judicial and social fabric of the Philippines," Kine said.

--With assistance from Clarissa Batino

To contact the reporters on this story: Cecilia Yap in Manila at cyap19@bloomberg.net, Norman P. Aquino in Manila at naquino1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Daniel Ten Kate at dtenkate@bloomberg.net, Jason Koutsoukis