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BI rescues 3 human trafficking victims at NAIA

March 16, 2023 Jun I. Legaspi 252 views

BUREAU of Immigration (BI) officers at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) intercepted three Lebanon-bound female passengers who attempted to leave in the guise of being “tourists.”

BI Commissioner Noman Tansingco said the three women were stopped from boarding their flights after they confessed that they were bound for Lebanon and recruited to work there as “domestic helpers.”

Tansingco did not divulge the names of the passengers as the law prohibits the public disclosure of human trafficking victims.

“These trafficking syndicates are continuing their nefarious activities, but we will not relax our vigilance in preventing their victims from leaving and [being] saved from the evils of human trafficking,” the BI chief declared.

The BI’s Travel Control and Enforcement Unit (TCEU) reported that the three passengers were intercepted last March 10 and 12 at the NAIA Terminal 3.

One of them was a 26-year-old passenger who was referred for secondary inspection by an immigration officer who doubted her purpose of travel.

When interviewed, she initially claimed that she was traveling to Malaysia as a tourist, but the passport she presented showed that she has an Egyptian visa. She also could not say if she is employed here.

The passenger then admitted that her final destination was Lebanon, where she was hired to work with a monthly payment of US$400.

The other woman claimed that she was employed as a sales agent for an appliance company, but she presented a dubious certificate of employment and could not present other proof of her financial capacity to travel.

She then confessed that she, too, was bound for Lebanon and recruited to work as a domestic helper there.

Another victim was intercepted last March 12, after claiming that she was bound for Hong Kong for a vacation. Further inspection revealed that she was actually bound for Lebanon and was offered to work as a household service worker.

The three women were later turned over to the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) for assistance in filing cases against their recruiters.

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