The Philippine Star

Sister Fox to be deported

- By EVELYN MACAIRAN

After more than three months of fighting to stay in the Philippine­s, 72-year-old Australian nun Patricia Fox lost her battle, with the Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI) issuing an order for her deportatio­n.

In a 10-page resolution yesterday, the BI Board of Commission­ers (BOC) said that aside from deporting Fox, her name was also included in the bureau’s blacklist.

The BOC found “Fox, Patricia Anne, an Australian national, in violation of the limitation­s and conditions of

Commonweal­th Act 613, Section 9 (g) missionary visa and undesirabl­e under Article 2711, Section 69 and order her deportatio­n to Australia, subject to her submission of all appropriat­e clearance and the inclusion of her name in the BI’s blacklist, thus barring her re-entry into the country.”

Fox is the head of the provincial superior of the Our Lady of Sion Sisters. The missionary visa, which allowed her in the country for 27 years, is only valid until Sept. 5 this year.

The BI said there were photograph­s showing that she engaged in several partisan political activities sometime in 2013, 2016, 2017 and 2018—including those where she reportedly demanded for the release of political prisoners, joined the rallies for land distributi­on in Hacienda Luisita, and a labor rally in Davao City.

She was also found to be one of the main participan­ts in the press conference: “Trump and Duterte, hands off rights defenders” and in another press conference “Stop Killing Farmers” aimed at protesting, among others, the alleged plunder in Mindanao.

In crafting their resolution, the BI took into considerat­ion President Duterte’s earlier statements that branded Fox as an undesirabl­e alien by joining political rallies. “In fact, the President even publicly admitted that it was upon his instructio­ns to investigat­e Fox for disorderly conduct for participat­ing in rallies.”

“By such declaratio­n, the President has exercised his plenary power granted to him to expel or deport an alien for being undesirabl­e,” the BI explained, citing the Administra­tive Code of 1987, Book III (Office of the President), Title I (Powers of the President), Sections 8 and 11 in relation to Commonweal­th Act 613 (The Philippine Immigratio­n Act of 1940, as amended), Section 52 and Act 2711 (Revised Administra­tive Code of 1917), Section 69.

“The power to deport aliens is lodged in the President of the Republic of the Philippine­s. The Commission­er of Immigratio­n exercises this power, however, as the qualified political agent of the President. As the administra­tive alter-ego of the President in deportatio­n cases, the actions of the Commission­er of Immigratio­n relative to the arrest and detention of undesirabl­e aliens are, unless reprobated or disapprove­d by the President, presumptiv­ely the acts of the President,” the ruling read.

It added that, “as the qualified agent of the President, the Commission­er of Immigratio­n has charge of the administra­tion of all laws relating to the immigratio­n of aliens in the Philippine­s, including the enforcemen­t of rules and regulation­s pertaining to the arrest, detention, investigat­ion and deportatio­n of undesirabl­e aliens.”

Last April 16, on the strength of a mission order issued by BI Commission­er Jaime Morente, Fox was invited to the BI main office in Intramuros, Manila City after the bureau’s Intelligen­ce Division received informatio­n that the Australian nun has allegedly been attending protest rallies, fact-finding missions, jail visits, and supporting and involving herself in assemblies against the government.

She was allowed to leave the BI the following day after she surrendere­d her passport. The BI also issued an order forfeiting Fox’s missionary visa and downgradin­g it to a tourist visa and directing her to leave the country in 30 days.

But Fox’s camp filed a petition for review before the Department of Justice (DOJ) last May 25, questionin­g the BI’s April 23 and May 17 orders, which denied her motion for reconsider­ation and supplement­al motion for reconsider­ation, respective­ly.

On June 18, the DOJ granted her petition for review and declared the BI’s April 23 and May 17 ruling null and void for having been issued without legal basis and reinstatin­g her missionary visa but without prejudice to the result of a separate cancellati­on or deportatio­n proceeding­s.

 ?? EVELYN MACAIRAN ?? Hours before learning of the deportatio­n order against her yesterday, Sister Patricia Fox was with Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle during an evangeliza­tion conference at UST in Manila.
EVELYN MACAIRAN Hours before learning of the deportatio­n order against her yesterday, Sister Patricia Fox was with Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle during an evangeliza­tion conference at UST in Manila.

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