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From the city to the barrio: Shabu labs moving out of Metro Manila
Published February 12, 2009 5:07pm

By BRENDA BARRIENTOS, GMA News Research

MANILA, Philippines - A posh subdivision in Parañaque City appeared to have become a favorite location for alleged shabu factories in the
past years.

Multinational Village in Barangay Moonwalk gained notoriety as a shabu-making lair: law enforcers raided at least four clandestine shabu
laboratories in the subdivision from 2003 to 2005.

The proximity of the village to the Ninoy Aquino International Airport could be one of the reasons shabu-makers chose to nestle there.

Since the first discovery of a shabu factory in the late 1990s until 2005, shabu laboratories were located in highly accessible urban areas for
easy transport.

Areas near airports and seaports were preferred for such clandestine establishments, obviously to facilitate the transport of chemicals used
in shabu manufacture.

But a study by GMA News Research indicates that this may no longer be the case.

While access used to be the main consideration in choosing a shabu laboratory site, data from the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency
(PDEA) shows that isolation may be the emerging trend since three years ago.

PDEA data on dismantled shabu laboratories from 2006 to 2008 shows a gradual increase in shabu labs relocating to secluded rural
barangays. (see map)

 
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Using Geographic Information System, News Research mapped the 38 shabu laboratories/warehouses found in 2006 (7 shabu labs), 2007
(22) and 2008 (9).
The GIS shows an increasing number of shabu factories in rural barangays.
In 2006, 29 percent of the raided laboratories were in rural areas. This increased to 32 percent in 2007 and 44 percent in 2008.
A rural barangay has a population of less than 5,000 and lacks a sizeable business establishment.
Shabu laboratories were discovered in Bulacan and Laguna in 2006. In 2007, shabu factories were found in Oriental Mindoro and Camarines
Sur. In 2008, the factories were in La Union in the Ilocos Region, Legazpi City and Iriga City in Bicol and Zamboanga City.
Based on police reports, some establishments were disguised as farms, resorts and fishponds.

The emerging pattern indicates that illegal drug tra ickers are now more willing to go to great lengths to hide their trade.

Former senator and Drug Watch Philippines founder Ernesto Herrera said this is a natural course in the shabu-making business.

“Shabu laboratory operators need some form of seclusion for their own protection, because the smell alone could get the neighbors
suspicious. Sa amoy pa lang, kapag sa residential area na yan, mataas ang risk na malaman kung anong activity ang ginagawa diyan,"
Herrera said.

Police and PDEA reports show that raids on these clandestine shabu factories were prompted by neighbors’ complaints of nauseating odor.

Herrera said urban areas are highly accessible, thus, any illegal activity can be detected.

“In urban areas, media is very active. Madaling puntahan agad kung sakaling mabalitang may suspicious activities na na-re-report," Herrera
said. On the other hand, rural areas are harder to access so they provide a good camouflage, he added.

The 2008 World Drug Report issued by the United Nations O ice on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) says more and more shabu laboratories are
located away from Metro Manila from 2006 to 2008. The report attributed this to heightened law enforcement.

Drug lords opt to locate in southern Luzon, Bicol, even Mindanao, the report said. Shabu factories were also discovered during raids
conducted in Cebu in 2004 and Davao City and Cagayan de Oro City in 2005.

The
  presence of these shabu laboratories is proof of what has been feared for quite some time: that the Philippines is no longer just an
importer of shabu. Experts say the strategic location of the country makes it a vital link in the production, distribution and consumption of
illegal drugs in the region.

The UNODC considers the Philippines as a major tra icking and manufacturing site of shabu.

PDEA said shabu remains the drug of choice of majority (63 percent) of local drug users.

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