Philippine Daily Inquirer

SOUTH KOREA VISA-FREE POLICY FOR FILIPINOS SEEN

- By DJ Yap @deejayapin­q

BUSAN—SOUTH Korea may extend visa-free privileges to Filipinos once steps are taken to reduce the estimated 15,000 “illegal” Filipinos living in the country, according to the South Korean ambassador to Manila.

“We hope in the near future we can have a [visa-free] policy between Korea and the Philippine­s but, so far, there are certain numbers of illegal Filipinos in Korea,” Han Dong-man told visiting Filipino reporters here on Sunday.

Han said there were 15,000 undocument­ed Filipinos living or working in South Korea, a number that was “increasing.”

Asean-korea summit

President Duterte was scheduled to arrive in this southern port city on Sunday to

attend the 2019 Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean)-republic of Korea Commemorat­ive Summit, which would be held on Monday and Tuesday.

Philippine and South Korean officials are expected to sign on the sidelines of the summit an agreement to continue discussing a free-trade deal next year. (See story in Business, Page B3.)

Earlier on Sunday, Noe Wong, the Philippine ambassador to South Korea, said the Philippine­s was trying to negotiate a reciprocal visa deal for Filipinos to rectify the “imbalance” in visitor exchanges between the two countries.

“We are trying to raise that issue on a quid pro quo [basis] because almost every time Filipinos come here, we need to get a visa,” he told a separate briefing.

Wong said there had been informal discussion­s about a reciprocal agreement between Manila and Seoul on visa-free privileges.

Koreans are the top tourist arrivals in the Philippine­s and they do not need visas for visits shorter than 30 days. The Department of Tourism aims to draw 2 million Korean visitors by the end of 2019.

Long visa process

But Filipinos need to obtain visas to visit South Korea under a stringent applicatio­n process that may take up more than a month.

Wong said fewer than 500,000 Filipinos visited South Korea in 2018. By contrast, 1.6 million Koreans traveled to the Philippine­s.

“It’s just that I saw the, shall we say, inequality. I don’t know if the term is right, because there’s no need for visa for them to go [to the Philippine­s] on a specific time,” Wong said.

“And in fact, I hear so many complaints about the length of time now to get a visa from the South Korean Embassy, right? From 15 days to 30 days to even 45 days now,” he said.

Wong said he was unaware if the matter would be discussed during Mr. Duterte’s bilateral meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Monday.

Han said his government might introduce a visa-free policy for Philippine passport holders if the number of undocument­ed Filipinos could be reduced, citing South Korea’s experience with its visa waiver program with another Southeast Asian country, Thailand.

“Accordingl­y there are many, many Thai people staying illegally [in South Korea],” he said.

“That’s why our basic policy is instead, if the Philippine­s decreases [the number of illegal people], naturally you can have [visa-free] policy,” Han said.

Simplifyin­g requiremen­ts

The South Korean Embassy in Manila is working to simplify the visa applicatio­n process for Filipinos, he added.

“There are many delays in issuing visa, so I asked my staff in charge of visa to facilitate, to simplify the visa documents, so more Filipinos will be able to visit Korea,” he said.

“But every day we receive 1,500 applicatio­ns. We will try to bring more steps … to facilitate the visa process,” he said.

In a separate briefing, Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Secretary Martin Andanar said Mr. Duterte would press for a peaceful resolution of the Korean conflict during the summit.

“[The President] has repeatedly said that he does not want to have a conflict [on] the Korean Peninsula. We’re talking here of nuclear arms and nuclear power. . .We are so close to South Korea,” Andanar said.

“Definitely not only the Philippine­s will be affected by this, but the entire world will be affected,” he added.

Andanar said he could not say what exactly Mr. Duterte would raise during the summit, but definitely “he will advance the interest of [the] Filipino people, and that includes regional security.”

Democratic South Korea and communist North Korea are technicall­y still at war. The Korean War, which broke out in 1950, ended in 1953 with an armistice and not with a peace agreement.

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