Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 18
  1. #1

    Default One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided


    http://news.inq7.net/nation/index.ph...lished_site=16

    Mga enterpreneur kaayo

  2. #2

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    Pasig right? ma relate man sab nato ang nahitabo sa Ultra kong onsa jud ni klase nga mga police naa dinha.

  3. #3

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    Read this part:

    The narrow entrance to the compound was usually manned by four men, armed with guns. Just a few meters away was a notice on a plywood, calling the place: "Shabu Shabu Restaurant."

    An instruction in Filipino written in chalk on the plywood read: "No loitering here."

    The sign also said in Filipino:

    Pickpockets are not allowed here.

    Those who will not pay will be punished:

    - First offense: Confinement in the toilet for one week.

    - Second offense: P1,000 fine

    - Third offense: You will be turned into a dart board.

    "Someone will assist you named JR and Jegs," the sign also said.

  4. #4

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    grabe sad kabuta ng mga nka assign diha nga mga pulis uy. klaro man nga hatagan na sila ba... sa?

  5. #5

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    Quote Originally Posted by FK
    Pasig right? ma relate man sab nato ang nahitabo sa Ultra kong onsa jud ni klase nga mga police naa dinha.
    'mo lang. likod pa jud ni sa city hall.. now, we know what kind of Mayor and Police, Pasig City have.

  6. #6

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided-

    Manila signs antidrug treaty with Beijing
    http://www.manilatimes.net/national/...60214bus3.html
    By Jonathan Vicente, Reporter

    THE Philippines and China have signed an agreement to curb the smuggling of illegal drugs and drug-related equipment between both countries, Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo said Monday.
    Romulo said he signed the certificate of Exchange of Instruments for the Philippines-China Extradition Treaty at the department.

    The agreement reaffirms the commitment of both nations for greater cooperation against the trafficking of illegal drugs.

    The treaty boosts the Philippine government’s efforts to “jointly address the challenges of an increasingly borderless region,” Romulo said.

    Foreign affairs department officials said the agreement complements previous agreements on bilateral cooperation against illegal drugs and 13 other transnational crimes.

    The treaty imposes sanctions on offenders, including imprisonment of more than one year, and more severe penalties under the laws of both countries.

    Romulo said the agreement will begin on March 12 and calls for comprehensive cooperation in the arrest, prosecution and conviction of offenders.

    “To support this cooperation, the Philippines and the People’s Republic of China are also preparing to assign police liaison officers in their diplomatic missions,” Romulo said after the signing of the agreement.

    He said the treaty highlights strong bilateral ties between the two countries, which mark 30 years of formal diplomatic relations this year.

    “The Philippines and China have now entered a ‘golden age’ of partnership as envisioned both by President Arroyo and President Hu Jintao. This ceremony certainly propels that partnership even more forward,” Romulo added.
    Buti nlang may ganito na....tamang tama!

  7. #7

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    from the song...... "money changes everything".

    ingon ana ka-powerful ang kwarta sa pinas!

  8. #8

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    Ang pangutana...........

    Kung naay Shabu resto ASA MAN GI LUTO ang SHABU

    Pag ka bright sa atong pulis....

    only catch the small fries and big fish got away..........



  9. #9

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    hehe.. maka relate ang taga mandaue ana... near sa balay sa mayor naay shabu lab.. and naa pa jud sign above sa lab kay fedex express delivery..

  10. #10

    Default Re: One-stop shabu 'resto' in Pasig raided

    OFW blew lid off secret ‘shabu’ flea market
    By Ramon Tulfo
    Inquirer

    IF THE people at the Mapayapa compound hadn’t beaten up one of their customers, the “shabu flea market” in the heart of Pasig City might still be doing brisk business today.

    The customer was an overseas Filipino worker on a long vacation from the Middle East.

    Few people know that in the planning of Friday’s police raid on the drugs enclave, a suggestion came up that heliborne troops be dropped onto the compound for the assault, but this was rejected because such a strike could provoke bloody fighting, according to information obtained by the Inquirer.

    Every day, hundreds of “scorers” or users of “shabu” (methamphetamine hydrochloride) entered the place, which operated 24 hours. It was a compound that never slept.

    The mauling incident was reported by the OFW to a media colleague, Erwin Tulfo, my brother. At the time, Erwin was still hosting for ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corp. the “Mission X” program dealing with exposés on the ugly side of life. The show has since moved
    Print this story
    Send this story
    Write the editor
    Reprint this article
    View other stories








    to another TV channel.

    By the OFW’s account, he had become unruly during a “session” in one of the 60 shanties inside the compound, and people beat him black and blue. He wanted to get even and continued to go to the place, not only to “score” but to observe, he said.

    Once, he said, he saw uniformed policemen in the compound. They were apparently regulars because the other customers and merchants didn’t mind them. Another time he saw a patrol car stop outside and somebody from inside handed money to its occupants.

    The OFW said some of the regular customers apparently were from the moneyed class. One night, he saw luxury cars -- a Mercedes Benz, a BMW and a Toyota Land Cruiser -- parked outside. There were also big bikes.

    Hidden camera

    The OFW sought out Erwin and told him everything.

    “At first, I thought he was ‘praning’ (paranoid) because he was talking fast and couldn’t be understood,” my brother said. Wanting to get rid of the man, Erwin told him to just come back.

    The OFW kept coming back. Exasperated, Erwin asked if he was willing to have a hidden camera installed on his person.

    The camera was as tiny as a button, its eye as small as a needlepoint.

    Bingo! When the OFW came back, he had a video of people selling shabu openly. In a second surveillance, Erwin sent his own TV crew. Again, the video showed people doing brisk business.

    Erwin sought my help in approaching the authorities. He wanted his show and my own “Isumbong Mo kay Tulfo” program to have a combined coverage if any raid should take place.

    The problem was who, among the police, could we trust with our “bombshell”?

    Man of the hour

    We went to Philippine National Police Director General Arturo Lomibao. He nearly fell off his chair when he saw the video.

    “That’s impossible! How can that happen in the heart of Pasig City?” he said.

    Lomibao called somebody on his cellular phone and told him to come immediately. It was Director Marcelo Ele Jr., the chief of the PNP Directorate for Intelligence and Detective Management and head of the Anti-Illegal Drugs Special Operations Task Force (AIDSOT). He arrived in no time.

    “Ask me for anything you need to complete the mission, I’ll give it to you,” Lomibao told Ele.

    “It’s a top secret mission. Only you, Mon, Erwin and I know about it at this point. If it leaks out, one of us did it.”

    Ele went to work. He asked if Erwin’s cameraman, who was hiding the informant, could come and give him all the details about the place.

    That same day, Ele and the cameraman flew over the compound, using a borrowed Air Force helicopter so people below would not suspect anything.

    With the information gathered from the air and on the ground, Ele pinpointed the possible entry point and the areas where to deploy men to prevent an escape.

    Shootout feared

    Mapayapa compound is about a hundred meters away from the city’s public market. The place teems with people.

    “This will entail a big operation,” Ele said in our second meeting. “Many men will be involved. A blitzkrieg. The problem is how will a big number of policemen get there without being detected?”

    Ele, a two-star police intelligence man, also considered that some of the residents/drug pushers in the compound were armed and ready to fight if cornered.

    Ele expected strong resistance, possibly even a shootout.

    Ground assault

    Erwin suggested we borrow Air Force choppers and have some crack police troops rappel down into the compound in a blitzkrieg attack. The main group would launch an assault from the ground.

    Ele pondered over the suggestion, then said: “If we use choppers, our boys will have to be covered by machine-gunners from the choppers while they’re rappelling down. We might hit innocent civilians.”

    “We will have to assault entirely by land,” he said.

    On Friday, about 100 PNP commandos in full battle gear assembled at the grandstand of the Camp Crame national police headquarters. They would make the assault.

    Countersigns used

    AIDSOT personnel were also around, along with chemists from the PNP crime laboratory and police from the traffic group.

    At the AIDSOT office, Ele made final preparations with assault team leaders Superintendent Eduardo Acierto of AIDSOT and Chief Inspector Ericson Dilag of the Special Action Force (SAF).

    “Let the SAF do the fighting,” Ele said. “We’ll take cover while the firefight is going on. We will fire back if we’re fired at. This way, we won’t be hitting each other.”

    As a countersign, all non-uniformed raiders, including our own crews, wore orange packing tape on both arms.

    Handling the children

    One group, composed of SAF troops, would surround the compound. The second group, the main assault body, would barge in. A third group, led by Ele and with whom we were imbedded, would go in only after the place had been “neutralized.”

    Also with our group were members of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency headed by retired Chief Superintendent Rodolfo Caisip. There was also a team from the social welfare department to handle children caught in the compound.

    No cell phones

    But most of the people, including the SAF troops, didn’t know what was going to take place. They were only going to be told by their commanders before they moved out of Camp Crame.

    To prevent any leaks, all cellular phones of the raiders were deposited with their commanders.

    To avoid detection, the 100 SAF troopers were packed like sardines into three commercial delivery vans. The non-uniformed raiders rode in a hired passenger bus. Others rode in their own cars.

    It was the noon rush hour and the convoy took a long time to arrive at the compound.

    On Soriano Street, where the compound was, many tricycles were lined up waiting for fares. Two vans unloaded their cargo of fully armed and sweating troops. They rushed the compound.

    A third van disgorged other troops in a back street which Ele had deduced would be the escape route.

    “Dapa! Dapa! (Hit the ground),” the SAF troops shouted as they burst in, taking people inside by surprise. Some of the troops cursed as they ordered the men to lie face down on the ground.

    Women without money

    The interior of the compound was a maze of shanties.

    The troopers kicked open some doors and saw some women in various stages of undress. Our informant claimed women who didn’t have money had *** with pushers in exchange for a fix.

    The raid was over in less than five minutes.
    Kong ang Pasig police nag pinulpol... naa pa gihapon mga police nga maau.

    good job!

  11.    Advertisement

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Similar Threads

 
  1. For Sale: One (1) condo unit in pasig city!
    By MYRUD in forum Real Estate
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 03-05-2011, 05:32 PM
  2. How to stop internal theft in retailing?
    By chriztophers in forum Business, Finance & Economics Discussions
    Replies: 22
    Last Post: 10-10-2008, 03:03 PM
  3. how does one compute for dividends in a business
    By Graecia in forum Business, Finance & Economics Discussions
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 07-13-2008, 05:56 PM
  4. Replies: 17
    Last Post: 08-07-2007, 11:22 AM
  5. New Malaysian Resto in Asiatown IT Park
    By cdboy in forum Food & Dining
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 01-14-2007, 11:11 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
about us
We are the first Cebu Online Media.

iSTORYA.NET is Cebu's Biggest, Southern Philippines' Most Active, and the Philippines' Strongest Online Community!
follow us
#top