Immigration officials at Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia) are alarmed over the growing number of underage Filipino women who try to leave the country and work abroad using fraudulent travel documents.
Since June, a total of 114 girls below 21
years old have been turned away by airport officials, according to Marc
Red Mariñas, acting immigration deputy commissioner and Port Operations
Division chief.
He said that in June alone, 67 people who confessed to being minors were barred from leaving the country.
Mariñas said that all of the apprehended passengers presented
passports showing that they were adults. They also had valid overseas
employment permits, working visas and job contracts.
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“It is evident that these young women were victimized by syndicates
that specialize in the procurement of documents to make it appear that
they are old enough to work abroad,” he added.
40 rescued in raid
Last month, the Manila Police District rescued more than 40 women,
some of them minors, during a raid in Sta. Cruz, Manila. They were
illegally recruited from Mindanao and offered work as household service
workers in Saudi Arabia.
A report from the BI-Naia Travel Control and Enforcement Unit showed
that the latest apprehensions involved four girls who were intercepted
on Aug. 2 while trying to leave on a Saudia Airlines flight for Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia.
The passengers allegedly admitted during investigation that they were
below 21 years old although their passports indicated that they were in
their late 20s.
They were later turned over to the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking.
Source - TheNation