PAL readying charges vs protesters
MANILA, Philippines - Philippine Airlines is preparing charges against its former employees who prevented one of PAL’s catering trucks from leaving the airline’s Inflight Center (IFC) building Saturday.
PAL lawyer Clara de Castro said airline security have identified the truncheon-wielding protesters who blocked Gate 1 of the IFC along MIA Road. The rallyists placed wooden planks with nails and set fire to a box to prevent PAL’s truck from leaving the facility.
“This is not the first time that former PAL workers prevented PAL employees and vehicles from entering and leaving its facility. But Saturday’s well-documented blocking of a PAL catering van shows how brazen they have become,” De Castro said.
She said PAL lawyers are preparing charges for violation of its property rights, particularly the right to free and unhampered access to its own property; the right to use its vehicles and buildings; and the right to allow its workers or service providers to enter and leave the facility without being harassed by protesters.
While the protesters’ claim that they have a right to make camp in front of the IFC building is “questionable,” PAL’s right to free access to and from its own facility is “absolute” and guaranteed by the Constitution, De Castro said.
She also said libel charges are being prepared against protesters claiming that the airline hired so-called “goons” to disperse their camp.
“Baseless allegations of dispersal is a poor attempt by protesting workers to cover up their own blatant violations by threatening harm against PAL personnel who want to bring out PAL property from its inflight center,” she said.
De Castro said PAL security forces merely took a defensive stance. “Not one of them ever touched a protester, a streamer, or any part of the protesters’ camp. They were there to ensure order in case things get out of hand as PAL tries to bring its truck out,” she added.
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