BAGUIO CITY – Illegal drug offenders comprise most of the Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDLs) at the Baguio City Jail-Male Dorm as of Friday, Sept. 23.
Jail Supt. Mary Ann Ollaging-Tresmanio reported during the virtual Third Quarter City Anti-Drug Abuse Council (CADAC) meeting on Tuesday, Sept. 27,
BAGUIO CITY Sixty-one Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDL) and 69 employees of the Baguio City Jail Male Dorm were found negative for illegal drugs during a surprise random test conducted in conjunction with the greyhound operation inside the detention cells on Tuesday, Sept. 27.
Photo via Zaldy
INSPECTION. Joint personnel from the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency and the Philippine National Police conduct a thorough search of the personal possessions and the detention cells of persons deprived of liberty at the Baguio City Jail Male Dorm on Tuesday (Sept. 27, 2022). No illegal drugs were found during the greyhound search operations at the facility. (PNA photo by Liza T. Agoot) BAGUIO CITY - Authorities did not find illegal drugs during greyhound and search operations among inmates at the Baguio City Jail Male Dormitory (BCJMD) on Tuesday. Charlton John Carame, Investigation Agent V of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA)-Cordillera, said the more than three-hour joint operation with the Philippine National Police-Drug Enforcement Group is part of the BCJMD's efforts for the renewal of its drug-free facility certification. "This is the second time that we have a joint greyhound and we did not find any illegal drugs," he told reporters during an exit co
BAGUIO CITY No illegal drugs or any drugs paraphernalia were found during the conduct of a greyhound operation inside the detention cells at the Baguio City Jail Male Dorm on Tuesday, Sept. 27.
This marked the second time such a surprised operation was conducted by the joint personnel from the
LIVING HISTORY. Naty Sugguiyao, (left), former chief of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) in Kalinga, in this undated photo shows the traditional tattoo inscribed on her skin using the soot of a "saleng" (pinewood) and sugarcane juice. She said that a "living museum" with people singing, dancing, and practicing their traditions and rituals will be a more effective way of passing on the Kalinga culture to the next generation. Also in the photo are former Cordillera NCIP director Ronald Calde (center) and Ifugao NCIP director Esther Licnachan. (Photo from the FB of Naty Sugguiyao) BAGUIO CITY - A former chief of the National Commission for Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) in Kalinga on Monday suggested that the Kalinga culture be preserved not only through a typical museum housing artifacts but also through "living museums" or people who practice and pass on local rituals and traditions to the younger generation. Naty Sugguiyao, considered as K