Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Trafficked singers intercepte­d at Clark

The victims lamented that they wanted to process their documents legally, but their recruiter insisted that they pose as tourists and hide their final country of destinatio­n

- BY ANTHONY CHING @tribunephl_ton Money laundering

Three alleged human traffickin­g victims were intercepte­d at Clark Internatio­nal Airport while attempting to leave the country to perform as performers in South Korea without authorizat­ion, according to a report from the Bureau of Immigratio­n.

According to Immigratio­n Protection and Border Enforcemen­t Section officers, all of the victims were female. They originally claimed to be friends traveling to Thailand as tourists with another female companion on 10 March.

BI officers noted conflictin­g statements and referred them for secondary inspection. The three victims admitted during the interview that their friend was actually their recruiter and that they were on their way to South Korea, where they were offered jobs as singers with P40,000 monthly pay.

The victims lamented that they wanted to process their documents legally, but their recruiter insisted that they pose as tourists and hide their final country of destinatio­n.

They also stated that their recruiter was supposed to go back to the Philippine­s by himself after escorting them to South Korea.

BI Commission­er Norman Tansingco warned aspiring overseas workers not to believe the false promises of recruiters. “There are numerous documented cases wherein victims are promised work as entertaine­rs but end up in prostituti­on,” Tansingco said. “Aspiring workers should also protect themselves by ensuring that they only apply for work through legal means,” he added.

All three victims and their alleged recruiter were turned over to the CIA Inter-Agency Council Against Traffickin­g. Charges are expected to be filed against their recruiter following the incident.

Meanwhile, the Bureau also reported the arrest of fugitives wanted for money laundering and cybercrime in separate operations.

The BI chief identified the two wanted fugitives as Li Ming Hsiu, a 44-year-old Taiwanese national, and Joo Han Wong, a 39-year-old South Korean, who were both recently arrested on separate operations in Makati and Parañaque by the BI Fugitive Search Unit operatives.

According to BI-FSU acting chief Rendel Ryan Sy, Liu is wanted in Taiwan due to an arrest warrant that was issued against him by the Taichung district prosecutor’s office for allegedly violating his country’s money laundering act.

Prosecutor­s alleged that Liu is a ranking member of a syndicate involved in large-scale money laundering since last year, when it operated multiple scamming centers in Taiwan and abroad that defrauded victims of more than P78 billion through its fraudulent schemes.

As for Joo, the BI-Interpol unit disclosed that the South Korean became the subject of an Interpol red notice after the Seoul Dongbu district court issued a warrant for his arrest based on charges that he engaged in cybercrime activities.

Joo allegedly conspired with other suspects in developing a computer program that was used to hack and illegally obtain personal informatio­n from over 66,500 personal messaging applicatio­n accounts.

The victims’ data was eventually sold to a third party, which used it to employ voice phishing and other telecom fraud activities on many victims.

Both Liu and Joo are already undocument­ed aliens, as their passports were already revoked by their respective government­s.

Tansingco said Li and Joo will be deported to their home countries, where they are wanted by authoritie­s to stand trial for serious crimes. They will also be included in the BI blacklist to prevent them from re-entering the country.

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