Daily Tribune (Philippines)

BI rescues Malta-bound traffickin­g victims

The agency also found out that their passports have been tampered with, with their visas chemically lifted from the passports as certified by the BI’s forensic documents laboratory

- BY ANTHONY CHING @tribunephl_ton

The Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI) on Wednesday reported that it has completed the inquest proceeding­s against two suspected human trafficker­s who tried to smuggle six Filipinos to Malta recently.

Immigratio­n Protection and Border Enforcemen­t Section (I-PROBES) chief Bienvenido Castillo III disclosed that the victims were intercepte­d on 22 March at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA) Terminal 1 after attempting to depart as tourists on board a Philippine Airlines flight to Hong Kong.

The five female victims and one male victim initially claimed to be tourists visiting different countries with two other female companions who they claimed to be church members.

BI officers conducted a secondary inspection af ter seeing discrepanc­ies in their statements and it was discovered that the six victims — who had been enlisted by the two female recruiters — were in fact headed for Malta.

Reports said that each victim paid P300,000 to P400,000 to their recruiters in exchange for completing their applicatio­ns.

The agency also found out that their passports have been tampered with, with their visas chemically lifted from the passports as certified by the BI’s forensic documents laboratory.

BI commission­er Norman Tansingco lauded the arrest and detention, saying that trafficker­s who prey on the vulnerable to earn money deserve to face the consequenc­es of their action.

“Let this be a warning against human trafficker­s who dupe victims into agreeing to depart via illegal means,” Tansingco said. “The entire IACAT (Inter-agency Council Against Traffickin­g) force is persistent in locating, arresting, and jailing these types of criminals.”

The six victims and the two recruiters were immediatel­y turned over to the IACAT for processing.

They were assisted by the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t, while the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport Task Force Against Traffickin­g, together with the National Bureau of Investigat­ion Internatio­nal Airport Investigat­ion Division, conducted the inquest proceeding­s against the two alleged trafficker­s.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­S BY KING RODRIGUEZ FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE ?? EMPLOYEES from a private company walk along J. W. Diokno Street in Parañaque City to take their lunch. Malacañang has suspended work in government offices — except private offices — on Wednesday afternoon to let employees go to the provinces for the observance of the Holy Week.
PHOTOGRAPH­S BY KING RODRIGUEZ FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE EMPLOYEES from a private company walk along J. W. Diokno Street in Parañaque City to take their lunch. Malacañang has suspended work in government offices — except private offices — on Wednesday afternoon to let employees go to the provinces for the observance of the Holy Week.

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