| Two US marines in rape investigation allowed to leave Philippines(AFP)
 Updated: 2005-12-30 09:18
 
 Two US Marines who were accused of raping a Filipina woman have been allowed 
to leave the Philippines after prosecutors decided not to file charges against 
them, local media reported. 
 Corporals Albert Lara and Corey Barris have been released from US embassy 
custody and allowed to return to their home unit in Okinawa, Japan, ABS-CBN 
television reported. 
 US embassy spokesmen and the Philippine Foreign Department could not be 
contacted for comment. 
 
 
 
 Lara and Barris, 
along with four other Marines, were accused of raping a 22-year-old Filipina 
woman on November 1 after the troops participated in joint exercises in the 
former US naval base of Subic Bay.
 |  A protestor wearing a Philippines flag and 
 symbolically chained during an anti-US protest near the US embassy in 
 Manila, 09 December.[AFP/file]
 |  The four other Marines and their Filipino driver were charged Tuesday with 
rape, but prosecutors decided not to charge Lara and Barris after they produced 
evidence that they were not with the others when the alleged incident occurred. 
 Lawyers for the alleged victim had earlier said they might file a motion of 
reconsideration to have Lara and Barris charged along with the others. 
 The case has drawn widespread media attention in this former US colony, and 
human rights advocates say it has opened up old wounds caused by past abuses. 
 It is also being seen as a litmus test for the visiting forces agreement, a 
treaty that grants limited immunity to criminal prosecution to US soldiers 
taking part in maneuvers here. 
 The US embassy in Manila had invoked the treaty in refusing to hand over the 
suspects, but said diplomats would turn the Marines over to authorities if the 
four were formally charged. 
 Rape in the Philippines is punishable by life imprisonment or death if there 
are aggravating circumstances. 
 
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