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July 10th, 2007 09:35 AM #1
This made the headlines several weeks ago, and I thought that since the issue died down, it wasn't true. But I read this column by Babe Romualdez today at the Philippine Star, and I think that this Ambassador really was guilty.
This is depressing. Yung mga ganitong insidente ang sumisira sa image natin overseas. DFA should fire this Ambassador, if the charges have been proven to be true.
Post-diplomatic lift
TAKIN’ CARE OF BUSINESS By Babe Romualdez
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Our email address has been filled with a lot of email in reaction to our column item entitled “Diplomatic lift” (July 3, 2007 issue) but the most interesting one came from Robert Neff, reporter of The Korea Herald who first broke the story about a Filipino diplomat caught on camera trying to shoplift from the PX store of the Yongsan military base in South Korea. Neff emailed us his version of that shoplifting story involving outgoing Philippine Ambassador to South Korea Susan Castrence and attached the link to his July 5, 2007 article implying that Ambassador Castrence, as well as officials of the Philippine Embassy in Seoul, had not been totally upfront and honest about the whole issue. Neff pointed out the supposed inconsistencies in the statements from Philippine Embassy officials who said the story was fabricated, along with a statement from DFA spokesperson Juan Cristobal initially saying the suspect was “definitely not” Ambassador Susan Castrence, as quoted in ABS-CBN news.
While it is common practice for newspapers and reporters to inform the subject of a critical news breaking story before publication, Castrence had criticized The Korea Herald for “not checking the facts” and for failing to give her the courtesy of informing her about the story prior to its publication – an allegation that The Korea Herald disputed. “The Korea Herald made repeated attempts to get a statement from Embassy Officials,” Neff wrote, naming Consul Juan Dayang as the official who was first approached for a statement.
It looks like some finger-pointing is happening with Ambassador Castrence saying Dayang may have been negligent in failing to call her attention to the matter. And while Philippine Embassy officials in Seoul seem inclined to dismiss the incident simply as a terrible “mistake,” insisting that the matter had been resolved on the spot at the PX store, Neff cited records at the US Provost Marshall’s office indicating that “on Nov. 28, 2006, Castrence was suspected of shoplifting a karaoke microphone chip and a bottle of Gucci perfume worth $118.60.” Asked why authorities would take the trouble of filing a shoplifting report if the incident has been closed on the spot, Castrence did not offer any explanation.
I have been emphatically urging the DFA to get to the bottom of the issue because that shoplifting incident continues to cause untold embarrassment not only to Embassy officials but to the country as a whole – and now comes this alliance of Filipino migrant workers called Kasammako (Katipunan ng mga Migranteng Manggagawa sa Korea) accusing the DFA in Manila of covering up the shoplifting incident. Kasammako makes specific damning allegations about the incident – which were subsequently published at The Korea Herald – claiming they have direct information that “a security camera clearly shows Ambassador Castrence took the stolen items.” The PX store manager reportedly approached Castrence to discreetly resolve the matter, to which the latter said she wanted to smoke a cigar first. In the act of lighting a cigarette, the diplomat reportedly dropped the stolen items and kicked them back inside the PX shop, and then denied any wrongdoing. Kasammako’s statement also said the wife of a senior US commissary officer confirmed the details of the incident. Apparently, the group is unhappy that so much time and effort is spent “to cover up and coddle Ambassador Castrence, while the rights and conditions of both documented and undocumented migrants have not been addressed since Castrence took up the post,” the workers’ group complained.
The migrant workers’ alliance – which incidentally carried the initial Korea Herald news report in a website along with a parenthetical note quoting sources saying the diplomat involved was the Ambassador to South Korea – is challenging the DFA to “admit the truth” about the whole thing. Once and for all, the DFA should get to the bottom of the whole issue. They should stop making these flimsy excuses about the incident not worth looking into because the whole thing is getting blown out of proportion, and is causing such acute embarrassment to the country. By the way, our friend Victor Garcia who was former ambassador to Vienna and now in charge of the legal affairs at the DFA has been nominated Ambassador to Moscow. His new assignment has nothing to do with this case of shoplifting – so I’m told.
[URL="http://www.philstar.com/index.php?Business&p=49&type=2&sec=27&aid=20070709 43"]
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July 10th, 2007 10:00 AM #3
kapal!!! kaya pangit ang impression sa mga filipinos sa abroad eh, dahil sa mga taong ganito...bwisit!!! whitewashed nanaman ba? sabagay this gov't has a penchant of covering irregularities that they commited..
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July 10th, 2007 10:11 AM #4Neff cited records at the US Provost Marshall’s office indicating that “on Nov. 28, 2006, Castrence was suspected of shoplifting a karaoke microphone chip and a bottle of Gucci perfume worth $118.60
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July 10th, 2007 01:37 PM #9
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July 10th, 2007 01:53 PM #10
When foreigners say that Filipinos are good with their hands, I don't think this is what they have in mind.
I feel the same way. Not a fan.
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