Philippine Daily Inquirer

Child traffickin­g case stirs suspicion of court

- By Vincent Cabreza

BAGUIO CITY—A court here started a clarificat­ory hearing on the rescue in June of three Bulacan teenagers allegedly hired as sexual partners by a foreigner who managed to slip away from authoritie­s without facing child abuse charges.

At a July 18 session, Baguio Regional Trial Court Judge Mia Joy Cawed required the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t and members of the police’s Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group (CIDG) to explain the circumstan­ces behind the June 6 rescue of three teenage girls from Bulacan, who were allegedly lured to the summer capital by an Oman national.

Four CIDG officers have been relieved pending investigat­ion because the Oman national had disappeare­d while under their custody, said Chief Supt. Benjamin Magalong, Cordillera police director.

Police have declined to identity the foreigner because of the ongoing investigat­ion.

The Oman national, police said, was initially detained along with a suspected Filipino pimp.

But Magalong said the foreigner was later taken out of prison by CIDG personnel to supposedly undergo inquest proceeding­s before he was returned to the Baguio City Jail.

The Oman national, however, was not in jail when police checked, he said.

The Bureau of Immigratio­n has been coordinati­ng with the Philippine National Police to trace the foreigner’s whereabout­s, police said.

The CIDG did not provide details about the rescue of the three girls, but Magalong said it was overseen by the Office of the City Social Welfare and Developmen­t Officer.

But the rescued girls were placed under CIDG custody instead of a social worker, which irked Cawed.

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