Rude passport control in NAIA
I living in the Philippines since June 2014 with tourist visa.
Last night I arrived from Thailand with all legit documents and ticket to third destination, and had issue with passport control in airport. One young police officer asked me: "What are you doing in Philippines?"
I said: "I'm here as a tourist!"
Police officer: "NO, WHAT ARE YOU REALLY DOING IN THE PHILIPPINES LAST 3 YEARS???"
Me: "Hey, do not talk with me like that. If you do not like your own rules, just call Duterte. I can stay as a tourist whole life if I want"
Than he called his boss. They brought me to some special room and asked many question. They even checked my Facebook and my girlfriend's Facebook. They stopped when I told them than I will call my embassy to ask them why they keeping me there without any valid reason.
Did anybody else had same problem with them? Maybe they expected from me to offer them a money?聽 Is their treatment was legitimate? If I have all required documents, can they still deny entrance to country?
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eduardo001 wrote:Hello.
I living in the Philippines since June 2014 with tourist visa.
Last night I arrived from Thailand with all legit documents and ticket to third destination, and had issue with passport control in airport. One young police officer asked me: "What are you doing in Philippines?"
I said: "I'm here as a tourist!"
Police officer: "NO, WHAT ARE YOU REALLY DOING IN THE PHILIPPINES LAST 3 YEARS???"
Me: "Hey, do not talk with me like that. If you do not like your own rules, just call Duterte. I can stay as a tourist whole life if I want"
First rule - NEVER upset an immigration official.
Next - They do have the right to detain you and deport if they consider it acceptable to them - not you.
3 years on a tourist visa is a very long time, even if they were all legal visas, so it's hardly a shock the officer stopped you.
No one has the right to enter any country except their own and an immigration officer an deny you any time he sees something he doesn't like.
Fred is extremely right for rule # 1.聽 Airport immigration officers have lots of power, anywhere!聽 If you did that in the US, Australia, you probably got deported.
Do not think you are always right when you talk to an immigration officer, even if really you are.聽 These people have seen it all.聽 They have seen expats entering in and out the country with a tourist visa for 5, 8 years.聽 They have heard all kinds of excuses and answers.聽 They have seen all kinds of items trying to get shipped in a country and they have the right to confiscate it if it violates the arrival country laws.
Always be respectful to them.聽 Do not raise your voice or answer back.聽 Do not make unnecessary jokes, especially bombs or terrorists.聽 They do not have time for those and will quickly arrest you.聽 Do not name drop.聽 Your embassy CAN help you, but it should be last resort.聽 But if you are really wrong, your embassy may not be able to help you.
I already have heard of people who were denied back at NAIA.聽 A few of these I know personally.聽 Chinese, Vietnamese, British to name a few.聽 Some of them have possessions remaining here and even has an active lease contract.聽 So don't you ever think you are special.
Be prepared to be harassed or interrogated or be asked with a question that will caught you off guard or unprepared to answer.聽 The key is to be relaxed and respectful.聽 Being tense or angry can mean to them that you are hiding something.
So the next time you enter, please be respectful.聽 They probably placed a red mark on you already.聽 Try to make up.
Cheers!
On the other immigration booth, I saw bags being opened and checked very well.聽 I am not sure what the problem was, but I can tell the arriving passenger was not pleased with the inspection.
Dressing well and smartly will also help you avoid being questioned.聽 I arrived in LAX wearing a suit and the one beside me (the one being questioned) was wearing shorts!
In all just remember they don't have to let you in.
Being granted a stay in the Philippines on a tourist visa is a privilege, not a right. You can be denied entrance, or being deported if you are already here, on any kind of reason or for no reason at all. A privilege聽 can be withdrawn at any time from those who have given it to you.
Staying in the Philippines on a permanent resident visa is different though since this is right that has been granted to you by the BID Commissioner and it needs his decision to have it revoked, and then for a valid reason.
I agree that being polite and nice to immigration officers is a must. Don't forget that they are doing a good job in keeping us safer here by stopping human elements who should not be allowed to enter the Philippines at all.
I have lived in the Philippines for 20+ years and occasionally met and observed foreigners who should not have been allowed to be here at all due to their bad and offensive behavior towards the Filipinos in their own country.
Have a nice day in the Philippines. :-)
On the other hand, not once was I subjected in the Philippines to undergo a thorough search at the airport after arriving from overseas. Most of the time it is a routine process, answering a few questions asked by the immigration officer and having your passport stamped.
But make sure you don't antagonize the officers. A friend of mine arrived from Honolulu in bad condition, because he was drinking non-stop on the airplane. He got into an argument with the immigration officers, but more importantly, he didn't have an airplane ticket out of the country, which is a requirement for all tourists. He was sent back to Honolulu and had to enter the Philippines again with proof of intent to leave the country.
Deca 2015 wrote:Wearing shorts is not against entry rules in the Philippines
Even if that is the case, it might not help if your case is borderline.
Deca 2015 wrote:Fred as long as your dressed tidy with shorts below the knee and look clean as well they don't bother in fact someone asked that question to an immigration officer who gave a talk聽 in one of our monthly expat meetings and He said the same thing
I was thinking more of borderline cases where an officer was either way on entry and the lesser dress code could possibly tip his decision.
I base this on watching officers at airports and the way they seem to act when they single out a passenger for inspection. Not claiming great experience, just some observations when in queues.
Opinion?
The only thing you can do is be polite even when they are not. I was asked in Manila airport why i was coming back to the Philippines as i have many tourist visa extensions in my passport. I told the officer i had my house here but that didnt stop him being sarcastic. I just stood there and said nothing.
Better to be quiet than rude back.
What happened to you i consider normal
You should always play smooth and down when you enter a foreign country .... Whatever the style of the IO.
Always smile , answer to questions and keep calm even he is agressive .
Talking about president and beeing 'hot' is not advised , lol.
Kind regards
There has already been a lot of good advice here. I've done a fair amount of travelling, in and out of some countries, living in others.聽 I've been to Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, India, China, Russia, Ukraine, Hungary, Turkey, Poland and the UK (and, of course, the Philippines).
I find that a sincere smile and openness always helps.聽 I've only ever encountered one slight problem, and it turns out I was at fault.聽 In Ukraine it is required to register your living address with the immigration people.聽 I did so, but was unaware that leaving the country meant I had to register again, even for the same address.聽 The Immigration officer listened quietly while I explained that I was registered, and showed him the stamp.聽 He then patiently and politely explained that I'd left the country a few months earlier, and that I needed to register again.聽 He must have believed me, because he said that I'd have to pay a fine, but he made it the minimum possible.聽 He had the discretion to impose a huge fine, but didn't.
I'm sure that if I'd argued with him the fine would have been much higher, and I could have been permanently barred from re-entering.聽 I asked if this would prevent me from re-entering, and he assured me that it wouldn't.聽 And it didn't.
We're guests in the Philippines, no matter what kind of visa we are on.聽 Even those who are married to a Pinay and have 'Migrant' on their i-Card are here only so long as the Philippine Government allow it.
If asked again why you are here, I'd simply smile and say, "I really LOVE your country!聽 The food is great, the people are so friendly, the beaches are wonderful - okay, the weather is a bit too hot sometimes, but everything else is great."聽
Is it pandering?聽 Probably - but those are my honest views on the Philippines, so I have no difficulty in sounding sincere.
Don't say you are here for the great food , they will not believe you and put you direct to jail , ahaha
I was asked similar questions and I always answer that I am planning to retire in the Philippines.
I just love the Philippines and want to retire there. This is true.
Some more tips to avoid being hassled even if you are totally innocent:
Always enter thru Clark. This is a huge retirement/tourist haven. You will be entering with a bunch of US retirees at all times. In Manila they often have an attitude. In Cebu, even worse.
Always wear non descript conservative clothes. A grey long sleeve shirt, track pants. All dark. Glasses also help.
As much as you can, choose an immigration booth with a younger officer. The most unfriendly to me were middle aged people.
Speaking Tagalog and Visaya helped turning their friendlier side to me.
Several other things may be going on here.
Security at the airport are on the lookout for criminals in drugs or child sex trafficking, or pedophiles.
Yes you can stay on a renewed tourist visa, but that looks suspicious to them because most people staying here get a more permanent visa if here that long.
Another reason may be that they want to charge you extra for an illegal balikbayan visa, which helps fill their pockets with our cash (as corruption at BI is rampant, I had it happen on more than just one occasion).
After 3 years, surely you've learned that attitude is everything. Go easy, hombre.
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