

The Bureau of Immigration (BI) reported on Sunday that their officers at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) prevented the departure of seven Filipinas to Iraq via Singapore last January 16.
In a statement, BI Commissioner Norman Tansingo revealed that the Filipinas were intercepted at the NAIA Terminal 1 before they could board a Scoot Airways flight to Singapore.
Tansingco said the passengers, all women, later admitted during questioning that their final destination is Erbil, Iraq where they were hired to work as janitresses with a monthly payment of US$1,000.
The government has imposed a long-standing ban on the deployment of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to Iraq which has continued to be plagued by violence.
Tansingco said the passengers were turned over to the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) for further investigation and filing of charges against their recruiters.
Their names were not divulged as the law prohibits the public disclosure of human trafficking victims.
According to the BI’s Travel Control and Enforcement Unit (TCEU) which interviewed the victims, the latter initially claimed that their clandestine trip to Iraq was arranged by a travel agency based in Manila.
They said that upon arrival in Singapore, they were supposed to board their connecting flights to Dubai or Qatar en route to their final destination in Iraq.
BI said the victims reportedly bared that some 30 Filipinos were already recruited by the syndicate to work in Iraq for the same employer.