MANILA, Philippines — Senate President and vice presidential aspirant Vicente Sotto III has advised other aspirants to undergo multi-drug tests at the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) rather than getting tested in a private clinic if they want “unquestionable” results.
“Ang pinakamaganda, dahil ito pinaguusapan natin top two positions in the land, kailangan dito transparent. So ang pinakamaganda yung sa PDEA,” Sotto told in an online press conference.
(Because we are talking about the top two positions in the country, we should be transparent, so the best way is to take the test at PDEA.)
“Salamat naman at sumusunod na yung iba, kaya lang sana ganun din ang gawin ng iba, sa PDEA sila,” he added.
(I’m thankful that other aspirants followed suit but I hope that they could take the test like we did, the one conducted by PDEA.)
Sotto and his running mate, presidential aspirant Senator Panfilo Lacson underwent a multi-drug one-step immunometric assay to detect drugs of abuse in urine at the PDEA earlier this week. They tested negative for illegal drug use.
After this, other aspirants for the presidency and vice-presidency have also announced that they underwent testing for illegal drugs.
Sotto, however, cautioned that private drug testing centers or clinics might produce “unreliable” results.
“Ang ginawa namin, sinuguro ko na unquestionable yung sistemang ginamit namin. At ang unquestionable is pumunta ka sa PDEA. Doon mismo kasi may system kung papanong gagawin,” he said.
(What we did, I made sure that the system we will undergo is unquestionable. And the indisputable thing to do is to go to PDEA. They have a system there.)
“Hindi pwedeng basta drug testing center o kung saang clinic lang, hindi reliable yun. Una yung drug testing na ginagamit, pang-shabu lang or pang-marijuana lang, yun ang pinaka common e. Yun ang common drug testing kit nationwide,” he added.
(It should not be just a drug testing center or a clinic somewhere. First, the drug testing kits they often use are for shabu only or marijuana only; those are the most common drug testing kits nationwide.)
According to Sotto, the drug test they took at the PDEA is meant to detect all kinds of illegal drugs.
“Kung ano ang resulta nun, tunay ang resulta. At lahat ng droga, naka-target. Multi-drug yun,” he said.
(Whatever the result is, that’s the truth. And all drugs can be detected.)
“Nakita naman ni Sen Lacson na ano siya e, sabi ni partner ‘Metikuloso to.’ Kasi pagpi-fillup pa lang namin ang daming tanong e,” Sotto added, saying they were asked to disclose medication they are taking.
(Even Sen. Lacson saw it, he told me, ‘This is really meticulous.’ Because we are really the ones who fill up the questions, which were a lot.)
“Bukod don, yung pati yung paglalagay ng sample, ikaw ang maglalagay ng pangalan, ikaw magsi-seal. Ganoon kahigpit yung sa PDEA. Kaya yun ang pinili namin at yun ang dinesisyunan namin na dun na kami magpa-drug test. Unquestionable,” he also said.
(Aside from that, the handling of the sample, naming the sample, you should be the one to seal the sample. That’s how strict it was in PDEA. That’s why we decided to take the test there. It’s unquestionable.)
Asked if aspirants who took their tests in private centers should retake them at the PDEA, Sotto said it would be up to them.
“We leave it up to them. But the people know, especially those in the authority katulad ng [like] PDEA, saka ng [and the] PNP (Philippine National Police), the NBI (National Bureau of Investigation) alam nila kung alin ang tama, ‘di ba? [they know what’s correct, right?” he said.
“So, we leave it up to them, it’s up to them. It’s also up to the people to believe the results whether it’s true or not—it’s accurate or not,” he added.