![]() |
| Contracts must be verified to prevent illegal recruitment & human trafficking, says Labatt Chavez |
Philippine government officials have often told Filipinos that working or moving to another country without going through required documentation is not only illegal, but makes the worker susceptible to abuse and all sorts of exploitation.
Just how dangerous this could be?
Labor Attache Cesar Chavez, Jr. told some 200 Filipino
migrant workers who gathered at the OFW Global Center on Sunday about real-life
horror stories encountered by those who bypassed established government
procedures, lured by promises of a cushy life abroad.
![]() |
| Press for details |
Labatt Chavez stood in for Migrant Workers
Undersecretary Bernardo Olalia, who was reportedly stopped from flying to Hong
Kong by his doctors because of a medical emergency.
As an example, Chavez said Filipinos enticed to move
to Cambodia supposedly as highly-paid call center agents often found themselves
being forced to work in scam hubs. If they did not do as told, or failed to
reach quotas set for them, they were beaten up severely.
To drive home the point, he showed several photos of Filipinos rescued from the scam hubs who were found with horrific injuries inflicted by their captors.
![]() |
| Photos of horrific abuse inflicted on Filipinos forced to work in scam hubs |
“Bakit naman
kasi tayo papayag na magtrabaho doon e mas mahirap pa sila sa atin?” (Why
would we even want to go there when people there are poorer than us?) said
Chavez.
“Trafficking is an organized crime,” he added. “Victims
cannot seek police help because they know that what they are doing is illegal.”
The same goes for those who were already working in
Hong Kong but were lured to another country with promises of higher pay
and easier jobs, but were often misled.
![]() |
| Basahin ang detalye! |
Chavez said illegal recruitment or human trafficking (or the recruitment, transporation,
transfer, harboring or receipt of people through force or fraud so as to exploit
them for profit) of Filipinos is now widespread in Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan.
“Diyan po ang
napakaraming illegal recruitment activities ngayon…” (A lot of illegal
recruitment activities are happening in these places), he said. “Our OFWs are
being brought to Europe, especially the eastern part, or the Baltic region, in
Australia and North America.”
![]() |
| Administrator Caunan talks about dire situation of some OFWs in Poland |
Administrator PY Caunan of the Overseas Workers
Welfare Administration (OWWA) who also attended the “kamustahan” with members
of the Filipino community, cited her own real-life experiences with about 500 Filipinos
she met recently in Poland.
Many of them, according to her, were undocumented so they were hesitant to seek help from OWWA. “Tinutulungan pa rin namin sila” (We still help them, anyway)
Many are poorly paid, earning less than 1,000 euros (about HK$9,000) a month, much of which goes to paying for their upkeep.
And yet, to get there, they admitted paying between
Php300,000 to Php400,000 to their recruiters who by skipping the prescribed processes,
ultimately put the workers at risk.
“Fifty years na
nating ginagawa ang pagpapadala ng mga Pilipino sa ibang bansa, alam na dapat
ninyo ang mga patakaran,” Caunan said. (We have been sending Filipinos to
other countries for the past 50 years, so you should all know the rules).
Even granting that salaries in the Philippines often cannot
match those offered in overseas destinations, she said Filipinos who want to go abroad for work should always
make sure they go through the process.
“Kung ang
kontrata mo verified, alam namin kung sino ang amo ninyo, alam namin kung
nasaan kayo, alam namin kung sino ang papanagutin pag may nangyari sa inyo.”
(If your contracts are verified, we know who your employer is, we know where
you are, we know who should be held responsible if something happens to you).
Caunan said this is the reason why the Department of
Migrant Workers has been brokering deals with various overseas destination so
all Filipinos who get to work there would fly out from the Philippines and pass
through the rigorous system set up for departing OFWs.
This is also the reason why the DMW and OWWA have been
focusing on retooling and upskilling OFWs so they will have better job
alternatives or prospects, either overseas or at home, and will not be tempted to become undocumented workers.
To guard against illegal recruitment or human
trafficking at overseas posts, Chavez the processing of
documents should only be done in the Philippines.
“Pag third
country, dapat walang short-cut kasi bawal yun.” (There should be no
short-cuts for third-country recruitments because that’s not allowed).
![]() |
| HK is one of 3 main transit points for trafficked Filipinos |
The other guidelines include transacting only with licensed recruitment agencies, which must have an approved job order (JO) for them; ensuring that all transactions are made in the agency’s office; and that all payments are receipted.
But he warned that even licensed recruiters have been
found to commit recruitment violations, like applying for only 50 JOs then recruiting
5,000 people. After word spreads that they are legitimate recruiters they start
collecting and amassing money from subsequent applicants, even while knowing
that the quotas given them had already been all filled.
(To report suspected cases of human trafficking call the action line, 1343 if in the Philippines and +632 1343 if outside the country)


























