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Metro

Immigration, Interpol step up drive vs human smuggling

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MANILA, Philippines - The Bureau of Immigration’s capability to fight human smuggling at the airports will be further bolstered as six of its immigration officers at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport were tapped to undergo a special training program administered by the Interpol.

In a report to Immigration Commissioner Marcelino Libanan, BI-Interpol unit chief Floro Balato Jr. said six members of the bureau’s migration compliance and monitoring group (MCMG) at the NAIA are taking part in the training program that started on April 12 in Camp Crame, Quezon City.

Dubbed as the Dismantling Smuggling Networks (DSN), the scheme aims to improve the knowledge and capability of immigration officers and other Philippine law enforcers in combating and crippling the syndicates involved in human smuggling, human trafficking and other transnational crimes. Balato said a training staff from the Interpol general secretariat in Lyons, France arrived in Manila to conduct the training for the immigration officers and other selected participants from other Philippine law enforcement agencies.

Libanan welcomed the Interpol project as a giant leap in the global campaign to stop people smuggling and illegal migration.

“This project deserves the support of governments throughout the world as it focuses on targeting and dismantling the syndicates responsible for victimizing millions of people who are enticed to illegally travel abroad due to ignorance and poverty,” Libanan said.

According to Balato, the project’s launching in Manila was preceded in February by a two-day meeting that was hosted by the Interpol in Lyons, France and attended by representatives of law enforcement agencies from around the world. The meeting focused on identifying methods to more effectively investigate and combat people smuggling by consolidating the efforts and resources of all law enforcement agencies globally.

Lost travel documents

It was learned that the meeting was held in response to an increase in the number of people smuggling cases being identified through hits reported by member countries conducting checks against the Interpol’s Stolen and Lost Travel Documents (SLTD) database.

The participants shared information on the criminal networks behind this crime and the routes used to smuggle people from the Middle East to the Americas via Europe, and also to identify emerging routes toward Southeast Asia. Use of fraudulent documents was also a key issue in the comfort and the need for countries to provide border officials with access to the Interpol’s database which currently contains more than 17 million entries.

Likewise the meeting in France was a sequel to a similar meeting held in Lima, Peru in October 2008, during which more than 20,000 international arrivals and departures were checked against Interpol’s database.

BI Airport Operations Division chief Ferdinand Sampol also said that this will bring to the test people on how to deal with the smugglers and put them to an end.

AIRPORT OPERATIONS DIVISION

BALATO

BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION

CAMP CRAME

DISMANTLING SMUGGLING NETWORKS

FERDINAND SAMPOL

FLORO BALATO JR.

IMMIGRATION COMMISSIONER MARCELINO LIBANAN

INTERPOL

LIBANAN

MIDDLE EAST

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