Pia raises alarm on
growing cases of Filipino ‘drug mules’
Press Release
November
18, 2010
PASAY CITY – Senator Pia S. Cayetano is calling on the Senate to investigate the alarming
increase in the number of cases of Filipinos being victimized by
international drug syndicates and used as ‘drug mules,’ most of them
women.
In a privilege speech
delivered on Wednesday, Cayetano said 630 Filipinos are currently
detained in prisons facing drug trafficking cases. China has the
biggest number with 250 detainees, 75 of whom are already on death
row.
“What is more
disturbing is that majority of the drug mules are women,” added the
lady senator, who chairs the Senate Committee on Youth, Women and
Family Relations. She noted that women make up 62 percent, or six out
of every ten Filipinos detained abroad for drug trafficking.
She said drug
syndicates have been employing individuals to become drug mules in the
guise of recruiting them for legitimate work overseas. Drug mules are
used to transport illegal drugs through various means, including
handling sealed packages, swallowing the substances or hiding these in
their underwear, and even surgically implanting the drug packages in
their abdominal cavity or placing these inside the mules’ genitalia.
She noted that last
month, a Filipina was sentenced to death for drug trafficking by the
Yogyakarta’s Lower Court in Indonesia. Also just last week, a Filipina
was arrested for carrying almost two kilos of heroin in Guangzhou,
China.
Citing reports from
the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA), she said drug
syndicates prefer women drug mules due to leniency in the inspection
of women in airports. This in turn makes women prey to the syndicates.
“Drug syndicates have
lured our women to allow themselves to be used in this illegal drug
trade with a promise of a better life. Filipino women choose to leave
the country thinking they have legitimate job offers from drug
syndicates. To make it even harder to resist, these drug syndicates
facilitate their travel by providing for their plane ticket and even
giving them pocket money to spend.”
Once they get to their
destination, however, the victims are left with no choice but to
follow the orders of the drug syndicates for fear that they might get
harmed, she added.
“Syndicates even go to
the extent of having relationships with Filipinas. Members of drug
syndicates con them into becoming drug mules by first courting them
through internet chat rooms then making them their girlfriend or
wife.”
Cayetano is slated to
file a resolution directing the appropriate committees of the Senate
to investigate, in aid of legislation, the alarming increase in cases
of Filipinos, especially women, who are being used as drug mules by
international syndicates.