A small town mayor in the Philippines who has been accused of being a Chinese spy has gone into hiding, officials said.
Police could not carry out a warrant for the arrest of Alice Guo over the weekend as she was not at any of her known addresses.
Scam centres were uncovered in Ms Guo's town of Bamban in March, concealed in online casinos that cater to mainland Chinese.
Her story has played out like a TV drama, as she had also been questioned on her Chinese parentage and suspicions that she was working as an "asset" or spy for Beijing.
Ms Guo's case has gripped the nation as Manila and Beijing continue to spar over reefs and outcrops in the South China Sea.
The Senate ordered the arrest of Ms Guo and some members of her family last Friday after she twice snubbed summons to appear in hearings on the scam centres.
"Show yourselves. Hiding will not erase the truth," Senator Risa Hontiveros, who is leading parliament's investigation on Ms Guo, said in a statement.
Ms Guo has denied wrongdoing. She claims her Chinese father and Filipina mother raised her on their pig farm.
But Senator Sherwin Gatchalian, who is part of the investigation, claims Ms Guo is a Chinese national whose real name is Guo Hua Ping, based on immigration records.
"She is hiding to evade arrest," Mr Gatchalian told local radio. "Our tracker teams will continue looking for her."
On the day the arrest warrant was signed, Ms Guo posted a statement on Facebook, addressing her constituents and alluding to the fact that she would not be around.
"Sorry for not being physically present with each one of you. I miss you all," she said, adding her absence would be "temporary".
In the post, she added that she did not regret joining politics, even if it hurt her so much that she "almost lost myself".
"I am a Filipino with a big heart for Bamban. I love the Philippines very much," she said.
Ms Guo's lawyer, Nicole Jamilla, told local television that her client would "definitely" cooperate with official investigations.
Aside from the investigation by the Senate, Ms Guo is the subject of a separate anti-graft probe that has led to her suspension.
The scam centres in Bamban have underscored how online casinos or Pogos (Philippine Online Gaming Operations) have been used as cover for text scams, human trafficking and other criminal activities.
Crime rings hiding beneath Pogos have even gone to the extent of building hospitals that provide cosmetic surgery to fugitives who want new faces.
Pogos flourished during the tenure of Rodrigo Duterte, whose presidency, which ended in 2022, was marked by close ties to China.
But under current president Ferdinand Marcos, Pogos have come under close scrutiny.
If proven that she is a Chinese citizen, Ms Guo would be not be eligible to serve as mayor. Only Filipino citizens are allowed to hold elective office.
But this does not matter to her constituents who benefit from her social outreach programmes, that are widely documented on her social media pages.
Ms Guo "brought change" to Bamban, and its people are thankful, resident Erica Miclat told ANC television.
Latest Stories
-
Bawumia taunts Mahama for his poor housing record as he commissions 1,000 TDC houses
11 seconds -
Election 2024: Key Highlights of National Election Security Taskforce meeting with EC held on November 26, 2024
33 mins -
‘Flawed from the start’ – Martin Amidu dismisses Supreme Court ruling backing Majority Leader
1 hour -
Afenyo-Markin’s bended knees recall plea insulting to electorate, waste of public funds – Martin Amidu
2 hours -
Martin Amidu: The majority leader’s memorandum to recall Parliament is needless now
2 hours -
Parliamentary disruption is a self-inflicted wound – Speaker’s lawyer criticises Supreme Court plaintiff’s actions
2 hours -
Seeds are more expensive than gold – Netherlands Ambassador calls for collective action on Agrobiodiversity
3 hours -
Grandad Sings: The 92-year-old TikTok sensation
3 hours -
‘No-one will win’: Canada, Mexico and China respond to Trump tariff threats
4 hours -
Kenya less open to visitors despite visa-free policy – report
4 hours -
New Mauritius PM has reservations about UK’s Chagos deal
4 hours -
Trump picks Covid lockdown critic to lead top health agency
4 hours -
Drake takes legal action over Kendrick Lamar’s Not Like Us
4 hours -
We’re too boring for kids for social media ban – LinkedIn tells court
5 hours -
Celebrating Prempeh, the Asantehene banished by the British
5 hours