Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOJ CHIEF: POGO SUMMARY DEPORTATIO­NS TO BEGIN

- By Tina G. Santos @santostina­INQ

Illegal Philippine offshore gaming operator (Pogo) workers will be summarily deported, Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla said on Wednesday, pointing out that it was the “logical” move for the government.

“Based on our procedures now, the filing of cases is not compatible with deportatio­n. If you file a case, then we cannot deport them because they have to be under the process of the law,” he said in a radio interview.

“So we have a choice. Either to file cases or to summarily deport them. The logical thing is for summary deportatio­n to take place because we don’t want to be keeping 20,000 people in a makeshift jail,” Remulla said.

“Summary deportatio­n is the only option. We will deport them for overstayin­g,” Remulla told the Inquirer.

The justice secretary, during the Senate hearing for the annual budget of the Department of Justice (DOJ) on Tuesday, said that there were 216 illegal Pogos whose permits to operate had already been canceled by the state regulator Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. He estimated that around 40,000 employees might be staying in the Philippine­s illegally.

“We know where they all are, we know where the offices are, so it’s a matter of time before we resolve everything here,” he said.

According to Remulla, the Philippine­s is now ready to deport around 280 illegal Pogo employees in their custody.

“We are scheduled to catch more people ... We don’t want to arrest them simultaneo­usly because this can result in a humanitari­an crisis if we can’t deport them immediatel­y. So we want to calibrate all the movement so it would be logical ... like the schedule of [flights],” he said.

Remulla, in a message to reporters, said he was meeting with the Chinese Embassy charge d’affaires today (Thursday) but was exchanging texts with Chinese Ambassador Huang Xilian, who is currently in China.

In a separate message to reporters, DOJ spokespers­on lawyer Mico Clavano said that Remulla was meeting with Chinese officials to discuss coordinati­on efforts between Manila and Beijing to bring back to China workers in the industry who were either undocument­ed, overstayin­g, or with an expired visa.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila welcomed the Philippine­s’ move to take strong measures to crack down on

crimes related to Pogos “and tackle its root cause so as to address the social ills in a sweeping manner.”

“It is reported that most of the recent crimes targeted at Chinese citizens in the Philippine­s are related to Pogos. It is appreciate­d that relevant Philippine law enforcemen­t agencies rescued a number of Chinese citizens and shut down some Pogo companies during their recent operations,” the embassy, quoting Huang, said in a statement on Wednesday.

Last week, authoritie­s rescued 43 Chinese nationals reportedly working under “human traffickin­g conditions” for a Pogo in Angeles City, Pampanga.

Chinese assistance

Huang said the Chinese government firmly opposes and takes tough measures to combat gambling.

Citing Chinese laws and regulation­s, he pointed out that gambling in whatever form by Chinese citizens, be it online or overseas, was illegal.

“Crimes induced by and associated with online gambling not only harm China’s interests and China-Philippine­s relations, but also hurt the interests of the Philippine­s,” the statement added.

The embassy also vowed to continue to strengthen communicat­ion and cooperatio­n with the Philippine government and law enforcemen­t agencies, adding that it would handle deportatio­n, among other issues, in a constructi­ve manner.

“The Chinese side stands ready to step up law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n with the Philippine side,” it added.

According to the embassy, Remulla assured China that the government would continue the crackdown on illegal activities and that the justice secretary sought the embassy’s help on deportatio­n, among other issues.

Economic harm

In Congress, a lawmaker warned that a total ban on Pogos in the wake of recent kidnapping­s and illegal activities involving Chinese nationals might be harmful to the country’s economy.

House ways and means committee chair Rep. Joey Salceda, an economist, likened it to burning down a house “just to kill the rat inside.”

In a statement, Salceda said “a blanket ban on a specific sector, when there are laws that already exist to prevent abuses in any kind of business, will be seen as arbitrary.”

“My stand is for the government to wield the full weight of the law against illegal gaming operations. But our policy cannot be to give an entire industry up just because there are bad actors. All industries have bad actors,” he said.

“It’s definitely worth keeping legal, fully compliant companies,” Salceda said.

Salceda suggested keeping Pogos within “Pogo-specific zones that are ring-fenced from the rest of the country.”

“New licenses will be in these zones, and existing licenses will be allowed only to complete their leases. Any offshore gaming that operates outside such zones will be considered illegal,” he said.

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