Ex-Mayor Alice Guo Deported to Manila Over Alleged Syndicate Ties

Former Philippines mayor Alice Guo, accused of laundering over 100 million pesos and having ties to Chinese criminal syndicates, was deported from Indonesia to Manila. Philippine authorities have charged her with multiple counts. Guo denies the allegations, claiming they are malicious attacks against her.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Manila | Updated: 06-09-2024 07:17 IST | Created: 06-09-2024 07:17 IST
Ex-Mayor Alice Guo Deported to Manila Over Alleged Syndicate Ties
  • Country:
  • Philippines

Former Philippines mayor Alice Guo, accused of ties to Chinese criminal syndicates and laundering over 100 million pesos ($1.79 million), arrived in Manila early on Friday after being deported from Indonesia. Guo, also known as Chinese national Guo Hua Ping, was arrested by Indonesian authorities on Wednesday after leaving the Philippines in July. She is wanted by the Philippine Senate for refusing to appear before a congressional investigation into her alleged criminal ties.

Philippine law enforcement agencies, including the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC), have filed multiple counts of money laundering against Guo and 35 others with the Justice Department. Guo, who claims to be a natural-born Philippine citizen, has denied the accusations, calling them malicious. She was deported from Indonesia for violating immigration laws, according to Jakarta's immigration office.

The former mayor arrived in Manila on a private plane flanked by Philippine law enforcement authorities, including the country's Interior Minister, Benjamin Abalos Jr., who led her handover from Indonesian authorities. "I have received death threats and I am asking for the help of Philippine authorities," Guo told a press briefing shortly after her arrival in Manila.

Abalos committed to providing security for Guo but urged her to disclose the truth. "Disclose all the names in order to serve justice and so all this ends. That is the only way we can help her," he said. The Senate launched an investigation into Guo in May after a raid in March by law enforcers on a casino in Bamban town, where she was mayor, uncovered what they said were scams run from a facility built on land Guo partly owned.

Guo became mayor of Bamban town in Tarlac province in northern Philippines in 2022. She ran as a Filipino citizen, but her fingerprints were later found to match those of a Chinese national, Guo Hua Ping, according to the National Bureau of Investigation in August. An anti-graft office removed her as mayor in August, citing grave misconduct over her alleged ties to illegal gaming operations in Bamban.

($1 = 55.98 Philippine pesos)

(With inputs from agencies.)

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