How can I avoid being stopped when exiting Phillipines by Immigration and/or being refused boarding by airline because of paperwork issues?

I am going to Sweden to spend the Christmas and New Year with my Swedish boyfriend, for 16 days. I am employed and have traveled to other countries before (although always with my family; this is the first time I'm traveling alone). To make sure, I've also prepared my bank certificate, bank statements, passbooks, certificate of employment/salary/and leave. I'm also scheduled to attend CFO seminar to get my certificate. In addition, I also have his personal documents such as photocopies of passport, national ID, and certificate of civic registration.
My significant other is also in the process of authenticating an affidavit of support and guarantee, and invitation letter in the Honorary Consulate in Sweden. I also have his bank certificate and statements with me, plus his university registration (he is finishing his degree and not yet employed -- I'm sure this will raise red flags though :/ ). In case, you're wondering how he can afford to sponsor me, he inherited his money (and several stocks) upon his father's death. I have the inheritance document and proof of stocks. He also fully owns a house (also inherited from his father).
When I fill out the departure form, should I tick the "Tourism/pleasure"' box or "visiting family/friends"?
Should I divulge that I'm visiting my boyfriend, if asked the purpose of my trip, or should I just say I'm traveling for pleasure?
I'm 21. Legal age. However, I read in an article that a girl was not allowed to board her flight because she failed to present an affidavit of consent from her parents.
Do you think I should get one even though I'm technically an adult now and allowed to travel as I wish?
Have I overlooked other documents I might need to bring with me?
How can I be more assertive?
I've been practicing this lately because I tend to stutter (it's a problem) sometimes and I'm just generally awkward.
Update: I got through Immigration without trouble. I was only asked three questions about my employment situation and that was it. Thank you for everyone who answered this question and helped me out.
Best Answer
A bit of introduction so people who're not familiar with situation could understand it better.
In Philippines the Bureau of Immigration does more than just checking that you have the proper paperwork to leave the country. By law they are required to make sure the Filipino citizens leaving the country are not potential victims of human trafficking. Those who are suspected to be victims of human trafficking are refused immigration clearance, and cannot leave the country. This is called "offloading", and happens quite often to Filipinos (foreign citizens are not affected).
The typical profile of Filipinos affected by this is:
- A female of relatively young age (the younger, the more likely it to happen, but I know someone who was 31 when she was offloaded). Very rarely males are being offloaded too. Discrimination, I know;
- This is her first trip overseas alone;
- The stated goal is either "visiting a boyfriend" or "tourism" without strict itinerary, hotel reservations, etc. A two-day "shopping" trip to Thailand attracts much less attention;
- The relationship was relatively brief (or even was purely online);
All this makes the Immigration suspicious of trafficking, because this is how a lot of Filipinos end up there (yes, this really happens). And once they are suspicious, they start questioning. As you see, their interest is very different from the airline, which only cares about you being admitted and doesn't care what you'd do after that. The Immigration is also trained well in detecting inconsistencies and uncover lies - they heard plenty. This is another reason why it is better to stick to the facts, tell the truth, do not change your story and do not try to make it look better.
Since you're going to visit your boyfriend, he becomes a critical person here, and they need to have information about your boyfriend - the more, the better. They need to see he is a real, genuine person (and not a pimp). So the more information you have, the better - it also makes it look more credible, as large volume is much harder to fake consistently. At minimum, the information you bring should:
- Prove that you knew each other long enough (the longer, the better) - photos together, your communications (chats, emails, etc).
- Prove he is a "normal" person (copies of his passport, other ID, job references, affidavits etc);
- Prove he is indeed inviting you (i.e. he is not some random guy you chatted for two years on Internet).
Also if he can be online/on call while you're clearing immigration, this may also help. It is unlikely they'd talk to him (they might, to check that your stories match), but the fact that he's online and ready to answer their questions weights in your favor.
Also the Immigration wants to make sure you have means to survive and return in case something goes wrong (for example, your boyfriend doesn't show up at all). Make sure you have enough money to cover your basic needs and flight change, so you can return. You may be asked about this; the Immigration wants to make sure you wouldn't end up on a street.
A couple more things to advise:
Arrive at the airport early, and go to immigration as early as you can. You WILL take some time there - make sure you have this time.
Fly out of Cebu or Kalibo if you can. MNL airport has the crappiest immigration ever, according to my fellow pinoy who been through experience.
This is one-time hurdle. Your second time the Immigration would be much easier.
Finally, the answers to specific questions:
When you fill out the departure form, tick the "visiting family/friends".
If you say you're traveling for pleasure, you would be asked your full itinerary (are you gonna sit in Stockholm for 16 days? what you gonna do there? where you gonna stay), and unless you prepare it very well, they will suspect you're making it up and thus hiding something real bad. An easy way to get offloaded. Another easy way is to change your story during questioning. Don't.
I don't think you need affidavit from your parents, but if they met your BF before and can affirm to that in writing. Even more useful would be if they go to airport with you, and wait outside in case Immigration wants to talk to them to confirm this.
Anything else you can do? Yes, assuming you have time. You can fly to Thailand or Vietnam for a day (same day or next day return) for shopping. Flights are cheap, hotels are cheap too, and you can buy some useful stuff. Do this a couple times. Many Filipinos do this, Immigration is more favorable toward this, and they treat differently people who have been abroad already.
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How to avoid offloading in Philippines?
What does offload mean in airport?
\u201cOffloading\u201d means getting a boarded passenger out of the plane. Before we proceed, we need to clarify that the Bureau of Immigration does not have an offloading policy. They do not usually pull passengers out of an aircraft.IT'S TIME TO ELIMINATE ONEHEALTHPASS IN PHILIPPINES|MORE ISSUES WHEN REGISTERING|NO BARCODE NO ENTRY
More answers regarding how can I avoid being stopped when exiting Phillipines by Immigration and/or being refused boarding by airline because of paperwork issues?
Answer 2
- Answer questions truthfully
- Do NOT volunteer information: just answer the question directly
- Be prepared with documentation
- Smile: be pleasant \ nice \ respectful
- RELAX: authorities can sense when you are tense and signals to them to scrutinize you
The last two are particularly important and determine how you will be treated. When answering questions: keep it short, simple and honest.
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Images: Markus Winkler, Pew Nguyen, Lukas, Ketut Subiyanto