Philippines expels Australian nun for 'political activities'

A 71-year-old Australian nun has been ordered to leave the Philippines, amid a political storm which saw the country's President Rodrigo Duterte weigh in.

Australian missionary Sister Patricia Fox in Manila.

Australian missionary Sister Patricia Fox in Manila. Source: AAP

The Philippines has ordered an Australian Catholic nun to leave the country in 30 days after the immigration bureau revoked her missionary visa for joining protest rallies, an immigration official said on Wednesday.

Patricia Anne Fox, a 71 year-old superior of the Notre Dame de Sion in the Philippines, a congregation of Catholic nuns, was detained for a day last week after President Rodrigo Duterte ordered her investigation for “disorderly conduct”.
In a one-page order, immigration bureau head Jaime Morente asked Fox to leave the Philippines after “she was found to have engaged in activities that are not allowed under the terms and conditions of her visa.”

Fox, who has been in the country for more than 27 years, has 30 days to exit the Philippines after receipt of the order.

Her renewable missionary visa, which was due to expire in September 2018, was canceled on Monday, but an immigration spokeswoman said she can still return to the mainly Catholic Southeast Asian country as a tourist, not as a missionary.

“We will file a motion for reconsideration on this order,” said Jobert Pahilga, a lawyer for the Australian nun. “She has not participated in any partisan activity. She is a nun.”

The left-wing activist group Bayan (Nation) condemned the expulsion order of an Australian nun who “has done so much for Philippine farmers in her nearly three decades stay here”.

“The Duterte regime is paranoid and afraid of an elderly nun working for human rights and social justice for the poor,” Bayan leader Renato Reyes said in a statement.
“The deportation order of Sister Pat is indeed despicable and utterly shameful,” said Reyes.

In a speech last week to soldiers, Duterte said he ordered the immigration to look into Fox’s political activities in the country. 

“It’s a violation of sovereignty,” Duterte said, accusing Fox of badmouthing his administration. “You do not have that right to criticize us. Do not insult my country.”

His spokesman, Harry Roque, even showed journalists photos of Fox speaking at farmer and laborer protest rallies in Duterte’s hometown in southern Davao City early this month.


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Source: Reuters, SBS


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