Business World

Senator concerned over issuance of work visas to fake companies

- — John Victor D. Ordoñez

A PHILIPPINE senator raised alarm on Wednesday over the Bureau of Immigratio­n’s (BI) issuance of work visas to foreigners registered as fake corporatio­ns.

“This is a national security risk,” Senator Ana Theresia N. Hontiveros­Baraquel said in a statement. “We won’t know if criminal syndicates are able to enter our country and we also have informatio­n that these work visas are what foreign nationals use to work for Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGO).”

Last Tuesday, Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla told a news briefing that he has ordered the BI to stop granting these work visas and to look into the issue.

He said the BI had allowed the issuance of “prearrange­d” employment visas to foreigners seeking legal work in the Philippine­s.

“We’re talking about more than 500 corporatio­ns and thousands and thousands of visas issued with the petition of these corporatio­ns which has been presumed validated by the legal department (of BI) and the visa issuing authority of the Bureau of Immigratio­n,” Mr. Remulla said.

This came after the Department of Justice (DoJ) discovered that thousands of these visas were not registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), with many being linked to POGO firms.

“I do welcome the DoJ directive that orders that BI stop granting work visas requested by fake companies,” Ms. Hontiveros-Baraquel said. “We will look into this in our next senate hearings.”

Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian earlier filed a resolution seeking to permanentl­y ban POGOs in the country.

In August last year, the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (Pagcor) said it would start the privatizat­ion of 45 casinos by the third quarter of 2025, which is expected to generate between P60 billion and P80 billion in revenues.

Mr. Gatchalian said the move and make up for the losses the government would incur from shuttered POGO firms after it was reported that Pagcor failed to collect P2.2 billion in unpaid dues from these POGO outfits.

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