Chris Brown on his knees, begs Philippines to allow him resume world tour
In a desperate appeal punctuated with a backflip, stranded Grammy-winning hip-hop star Chris Brown got down on his knees Friday begging to be allowed to leave the Philippines and resume his world tour.
The
26-year-old American has been stuck in the Southeast Asian nation for two days
after a politically influential sect filed a fraud complaint, saying it is owed
a million-dollar-plus refund after he skipped a concert last year.
“Please,
please, let us leave, please,” Brown said in a video posted on his
official Instagram account, showing him on his knees inside what appeared to be
his hotel room. The post was later taken down.
He ended the
plea with his signature backflip.
He also
appeared to send a thinly veiled distress signal to US President Barack Obama
as he captioned the post: “OBAMA!!!!”
In two
subsequent Twitter posts Brown said: “This is a very serious situation and
someone needs to be held accountable for mixing my name up in all this. I’ve
done nothing wrong!!!”
He added: “I
have nothing to do with anything going on right now. I came back to Manila to
do a make-up show for New Years. I did the show three days ago.”
Brown
performed to a packed crowd at a Manila arena on Tuesday.
But he
failed to show up on December 31 last year for a concert sponsored by the
Christian group Iglesia ni Cristo at its mammoth 55,000-seater indoor stadium
on Manila’s outskirts.
He has
reportedly said he lost his passport at the time so he could not travel.
The justice
department barred him from leaving Wednesday unless he produces a government
document certifying he has no legal obligations in the country.
Brown and
his promoter were paid more than $1 million by a production outfit identified
with the Iglesia to perform at the sect’s Philippine Arena, according to the
Iglesia complaint.
The outfit
demanded a refund, but both Brown and his promoter refused to pay, it alleged.
The sect is
a minority in the Philippines — where 80 percent of its 100 million people are
Catholics — but wields considerable political clout.
It has
between two and three million members according to media and votes as a bloc
during elections.
“He has to
coordinate with the Bureau of Immigration because (it) has the authority to either
grant or deny the emigration clearance certificate,” Justice Secretary Leila de
Lima told reporters Friday.
Immigration
spokeswoman Elaine Tan told AFP Friday that Brown had not yet applied for such
a document.
Brown’s
spokeswoman and promoter were not available for comment Friday.
Brown’s
Twitter posts were re-tweeted close to 2,000 times just minutes after the hip
hop star uploaded them.
He has more
than 14 million followers on the micro-blogging site, and 12 million on the
photo-sharing platform Instagram.
A playful,
bewildered Brown posted a foul-mouthed rant on his Instagram on Thursday as he
break-danced apparently to make light of his predicament.
But his tone
was more serious on Friday as the upcoming stops of his world tour drew nearer.
Brown is
scheduled to perform in Israel and Cyprus next week before returning to the US
for more concert dates, according to his website.
Asked about
Brown’s case, US embassy spokesman Kurt Hoyer told AFP on Friday: “The embassy
assists its citizens who are in need.”
The Brown
saga was the latest case of Western entertainers riling Filipino groups and
politicians.
The Beatles
were stripped of police escorts at the end of their 1966 Manila tour after they
snubbed a party invite from the then Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos’
flamboyant wife Imelda Marcos.
The Fab Four
were forced to run a gauntlet of angry fans as they boarded their plane.
Michael
Jackson was forced to move his concert venue in 1996 after the mayor of Manila
refused to host his show due to child molestation charges against the US star.
In 2012,
flamboyant American pop star Lady Gaga’s show was closely monitored by state
censors for blasphemous imagery.
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