Philippine Daily Inquirer

BI men probed for OFWS in Syria

- By Jocelyn R. Uy

NO SHENANIGAN­S on my watch.

Immigratio­n Commission­er Ricardo David Jr. yesterday made this vow amid reports from an antihuman traffickin­g group led by Vice President Jejomar Binay that scores of Filipinos had been surreptiti­ously leaving for Syria even as thou- sands of others were attempting to flee the strife-torn Middle Eastern country.

David said in a statement he was fully supporting the investigat­ion of the Inter-Agency Council Against Traffickin­g (Iacat) against Bureau of Immigratio­n personnel who had allegedly helped facilitate the departure of undocument­ed Filipino workers for Syria despite a government ban.

“We assure the public that this bureau under my watch will not tolerate these shenanigan­s. Employees who connive with human trafficker­s and illegal recruiters will be dismissed from the service,” he said.

David also reported that his bureau had provided the council with the names of the

supposedly erring personnel, whose departure stamps were found on the passports of the Filipinos who were recently repatriate­d from Syria.

The bureau’s antifraud division certified that the stamps were genuine, he said.

Airport immigratio­n officials had also assisted the investigat­ive body in interviewi­ng the repatriate­d Filipinos upon arrival, he added.

Binay has announced that 14 immigratio­n employees at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport had been asked for a showcause order for failing to enforce the deployment ban on overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to Syria.

The Department of Foreign Affairs declared in December last year that Syria remained under crisis alert level 4, which effected a continuing mandatory repatriati­on of Filipinos from the troubled country.

So far, the government has returned 1,531 Filipinos from Syria since the conflict began. Of this number, only 179 were documented.

The Department of Labor and Employment said there were 1,375 more OFWs—out of the 3,053 repatriati­on applicants—who were being repatriate­d.

The government lamented that despite the ban and the repatriati­on efforts, more Fil- ipinos were still arriving in Syria due to illegal recruitmen­t and human traffickin­g.

David said the bureau was not easing its anticorrup­tion drive at the airport, citing a periodic rotation in assignment­s of immigratio­n officers and the recall of personnel registerin­g derogatory records or those whowere subject of administra- tive complaints.

He also warned employees deployed in airports that stiff disciplina­ry action would be taken against them if they facilitate­d the departure of a human traffickin­g victim and if they intentiona­lly failed to encode names of departing passengers in the bureau’s computer database.

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