Bureau of Immigration (BI) agents at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) have arrested on Monday, April 10, a Korean national who tried to board a Philippine Airline flight to Cambodia with a Philippine passport.
(Courtesy of Bureau of Immigration via MANILA BULLETIN)
In a report to Immigration Commissioner Norman Tansingco, BI intelligence chief Fortunato Manahan Jr. said the 43-year-old Korean presented a Philippine passport, but can't answer basic questions in any Filipino dialect. “Upon interview, the alien admitted that he used to have a Korean passport, and he obtained his Philippine passport through another Korean national,” said Manahan. The Korean also presented a postal ID and a Philippine driver’s license. The BI’s anti-fraud section certified that the passport presented was genuine. He was unable to describe basic details about his identity, including the names of his parents and his alleged wife and child. He was only identified as a certain "Kim." Tansingco has sought probe on the fraudulently-acquired Philippine passport. “There have been many instances in the past of foreign nationals obtaining Philippine documents through misrepresentation and illegal means that have been stopped by our alert officers,” the BI chief said. The Korean is currently being held by the BI pending prosecution for violating immigration laws. The spurious acquisition of travel documents warrants deportation.
(Courtesy of Bureau of Immigration via MANILA BULLETIN)
In a report to Immigration Commissioner Norman Tansingco, BI intelligence chief Fortunato Manahan Jr. said the 43-year-old Korean presented a Philippine passport, but can't answer basic questions in any Filipino dialect. “Upon interview, the alien admitted that he used to have a Korean passport, and he obtained his Philippine passport through another Korean national,” said Manahan. The Korean also presented a postal ID and a Philippine driver’s license. The BI’s anti-fraud section certified that the passport presented was genuine. He was unable to describe basic details about his identity, including the names of his parents and his alleged wife and child. He was only identified as a certain "Kim." Tansingco has sought probe on the fraudulently-acquired Philippine passport. “There have been many instances in the past of foreign nationals obtaining Philippine documents through misrepresentation and illegal means that have been stopped by our alert officers,” the BI chief said. The Korean is currently being held by the BI pending prosecution for violating immigration laws. The spurious acquisition of travel documents warrants deportation.