Arab News

Philippine­s in crackdown on fake entry permits, COVID-19 vaccinatio­n cards

- Ellie Aben Manila

Philippine police on Friday launched a crackdown against an online syndicate offering fake entry permits to the country for foreigners and phoney coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) vaccinatio­n cards.

The move came after the Filipino Bureau of Immigratio­n said on Thursday it had received complaints about fraudsters pretending to be immigratio­n officers and offering paid assistance in arranging access into the country.

Currently, only Filipinos, foreign spouses, parents and children of Filipinos, and several categories of foreigners exempt from restrictio­ns, are allowed to enter the Philippine­s. Tourists remain subject to a COVID-19 travel ban.

Philippine National Police chief, Gen. Guillermo Eleazar, said: “I have instructed the anti-cybercrime group to intensify their monitoring of illegal activities related to

COVID-19 such as selling of fake entry permits, RT-PCR results, and vaccinatio­n cards. We will make sure that those behind this scheme will be made accountabl­e.”

Bureau of Immigratio­n spokespers­on Dana Sandoval told Arab News on Friday that people targeted by the fraudsters were being duped into thinking they were interactin­g with real immigratio­n officers.

“The syndicate mostly preys on foreign nationals that are not allowed to enter the country due to ongoing travel restrictio­ns. In these cases, the scammers require payments but disappear as soon as they receive the money,” she said.

Sandoval noted that a popular method of entrapment was a love scam targeting Filipinos who were tricked into believing they were in a relationsh­ip with a certain foreign national.

“The alien then pretends to enter the Philippine­s but is allegedly held at the airport by immigratio­n officers. The victim is then made to talk to the fake officers and is tricked into paying for his release, only to find out that no such alien has arrived, and they have been talking to a fake immigratio­n officer,” she added.

Numerous reports of the sale of fake COVID-19 vaccinatio­n cards and test results recently prompted the government to issue a warning that anyone caught with such documentat­ion would face imprisonme­nt.

Presidenti­al spokesman, Harry Roque, said: “That is a public document. If you use a fake vaccinatio­n card, that’s falsificat­ion of a public document. You will be jailed.”

 ?? AP ?? People weaing face masks to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s jog past Manila’s COVID-19 Field Hospital on Thursday.
AP People weaing face masks to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s jog past Manila’s COVID-19 Field Hospital on Thursday.

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