Philippine Daily Inquirer

Korean lured compatriot­s to PH for sex, charged P75K per ‘escort’

- By Philip C. Tubeza

THE BUREAU of Immigratio­n (BI) will deport a South Korean national who allegedly headed a prostituti­on ring in Manila that catered to his compatriot­s coming over from their country, Commission­er Ricardo David Jr. said yesterday.

David said Park Jun Youn, 44, was arrested on April 18 at his rented apartment on Debron Street, Makati City, by members of the BI’S Fugitive Search Unit (FSU).

“He should be deported for taking advantage of Filipino women whom he exploited and lured to have sex with Korean men,” David said in a statement.

Park was arrested based on a summary deportatio­n order issued by the bureau’s board of commission­ers against him for being an undesirabl­e alien.

The Immigratio­n Act expressly authorizes the commission­er to order the arrest of an alien who gets involved in prostituti­on or manages a prostituti­on house, David said.

Lawyer Ma. Antonette Mangrobang, acting bureau intelligen­ce chief, said the Cheongju district court in South Korea last year issued an arrest warrant for Park after he was charged with violating local antisexual traffickin­g and brokering laws.

South Korean authoritie­s accused him of enticing scores of South Korean men to travel to Manila between March 2007 and March 2008 to have sex with Filipino women through his “escort service” business.

Park allegedly charged each Korean man a fee of P75,000 to avail himself of an “escort.”

Mangrobang said Park managed to obtain a permanent visa from the bureau in 2010 but this was canceled after it was learned that he was a wanted man in his country.

“A permanent visa does not confer on a foreigner the absolute right to stay in the Philippine­s. It is only a privilege that can be withdrawn if the foreigner’s presence here is inimical to the national interest,” Mangrobang said.

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