Mail Order Brides: A Thing of the Past?
The Philippine Commission on Filipinos Overseas is redrafting the
law on mail-order brides to bring it into the 21st century with
provisions to monitor the underground industry’s move to the internet.
Under
the increasingly outdated law, it is illegal to arrange the marriage of
Filipino women to foreign nationals via mail order, advertisements,
publications or dating clubs. The draft of the new law has not been
finalised, but penalties will be increased substantially and the law
will include websites and blogs.
In 1990, when the law was introduced, the Philippines had earned the
dubious distinction of being one of the major centres for mail-order
brides in the world, a stigma that lingers today despite attempts to
end the practice.
This year during an interview on The Late Show
with David Letterman, Alec Baldwin, a US actor, joked that he wanted to
have more kids so “I may have to get a Filipina mail-order bride”.
“Since the law was introduced we have fought
hard to try to end the practice of some foreigners preying on the
poverty of this country to buy a wife,” said Maria Galias of the
commission’s migrant integration and education division.
“These
are innocent girls. Many of them are from poor backgrounds and just
want to escape poverty. They don’t know what they are getting
themselves into.”
While mail-order catalogues are a thing of the past, new technology
has filled the void, opening up a bigger world where women can be
enticed into marriage – some good, some bad – with some simply
disappearing into human trafficking networks.
“That is why we
need to redraft the law on mail-order brides to make it relevant to the
21st century and the internet,” Ms Galias said.
“When the law
was drafted, the internet was not around and the maximum fine was just
20,000 pesos [Dh1,600] or eight years in jail.”
“It
is very difficult to get these girls to file complaints against
marriage brokers or matchmakers,” said Janet Ramos, a senior emigrant
officer with the commission’s human trafficking task force.
“We
estimate there are about 200 [internet] sites out there focusing on
mail-order brides. It is hard to close them down as the sites are
located outside the Philippines and beyond our reach.”
Despite the inherent
dangers, in internet cafes all over the Philippines, thousands of women
search dating sites for a foreign husband.
The commission said
many sites are used to exploit women not only in the Philippines but in
other countries, especially Russia and other nations in the former
eastern bloc. Most countries do not ban dating sites or sites for women
seeking husbands, but some sites are fronts for trafficking. Trying to
work out which are genuine is the problem, especially in a country like
the Philippines where people are strapped for cash.
According to data from the commission, about 300,000 Filipinas married foreign nationals over the past 20 years, about one-quarter of these were arranged by syndicates. Some, operating through contacts in the Philippines, arrange paid tours for foreigners that culminate in a gathering at a local hotel where girls are paraded in front of them.
In 2007, 23,927 Filipinas married foreigners, according to data compiled by the commission. Under Philippine law, Filipino spouses of foreign nationals must attend a guidance and counselling programme known as the pre-departure orientation seminar before they are issued a passport.Although data for 2008 have not been compiled yet, the figure is expected to be roughly the same according to the commission, with more than half going to Japan or the United States.
Brenda Kuehn, 25, from Surigao, northern Mindanao, met her husband, Kyle, 51, online four years ago. She will soon leave for the suburbs of Sacramento, California, and what she hopes will be a much better life than the one she has in the Philippines.
“There is nothing for me here. I just want to be happy and have a better life,” she said.
“I
have friends and relatives who have met their foreign husbands on the
net. I could never imagine how anyone can have a romance in
cyberspace,” she said.
Brenda said she and her husband talked for up to five hours a day from her cyber cafe in Surigao.
They met face to face in March 2007 when Kyle flew out to meet her. They married in November of the same year.
“I
was a little scared at first when I met him, but he quickly put me at
ease. Age is not a problem. He has been divorced for 20 years and has
no children.” An only child, Brenda has no regrets about leaving the
Philippines. “I know Surigao has some of the best surfing beaches in
the Philippines and foreigners who go there say it is paradise, but I
grew up there and I know there is no future for me there.”
“Some find happiness; some find themselves trapped by culture, language and abuse. Our job here is to make sure they know what they are getting themselves into,” she said.


