PH embassy engaging with US authorities after Filipino seafarers denied entry
The seal of the State Department is photographed at the Washington Passport Agency, July 12, 2016, in Washington. (AP File Photo/Alex Brandon)
The Philippine Embassy in Washington said that it is currently working with relevant agencies of the United States over the reported denial of entry to Filipino seafarers in the past months.
In a statement on Wednesday, Oct. 22, the embassy took note of the reports that Filipinos seafarers were refused entry at US ports in recent months, and assured that it is talking with the US Department of State and the Department of Homeland Security.
“It has been informed that the denial of entry for the concerned seafarers was done in accordance with existing US laws, regulations and policies,” the statement read.
“The Embassy will nevertheless continue engaging with the said agencies regarding these denials of entry and ensure that mandatory consular notification is observed in such cases,” it added.
While there were reports that some Filipino seafarers lost their employment because of being detained and deported from US ports, the embassy said that this issue is now under the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW).
The DMW has the mandate to provide assistance to overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), including seafarers.
“The DMW has previously stated its readiness to provide assistance to affected seafarers,” the embassy stressed.
Senator Raffy Tulfo, who chairs the Senate Committee on Migrant Workers, has raised this issue with outgoing US Ambassador MaryKay Carlson last month.
This was after several Filipino cruise ship crew testified during a Senate hearing in August that their entry was denied even after the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers found no child pornography materials when they checked their mobile phones.
The seafarers claimed that ICE officers boarded their ship to look at their mobile phones to check for child pornography content.
The senator said some of the seafarers were detained before they were deported.