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| Sec Cacdac and USec Olalia post closure notices at the 2 establishments |
Ordered closed were the JLPT/JFT Training and Assessment Center in Mandaue City and Anaya USA Visa Consultancy in Cebu City, after they were found to have offered jobs abroad to Filipinos without the required licenses and authority.
A statement posted on the DMW Anti-Illegal Recruitment and Trafficking in Persons Program said the raids were in line with the government’s intensified crackdown on unauthorized overseas employment schemes and human trafficking.
The said laws apply to businesses that present themselves as visa consultancy firms but offer jobs abroad to sweeten the deal.
No mention was made, however, of who were behind the operation of the two establishments. But the DMW assured that criminal complaints for illegal recruitment will be filed against the individuals behind the operations and that they will be recommended for inclusion in the agency’s list of persons and entities with derogatory records.
First to be closed was the JLPT/JFT Training and Assessment Center, located in Amanah & Sons Marketing Building along AS Fortuna Street in Mandaue City.
DMW investigators reportedly found that the center offered Japanese language training to jobseekers and charged them a training fee of Php28,500 while promising them jobs as dairy farmers, caregivers and cleaners in Japan with monthly salaries of between Php50,000 and Php100,000.
Anaya which is based at Meridian by Avenir in Mabolo, Cebu City, was supposed to operate as a visa consultancy firm, is alleged to have lured job applicants with promises of seasonal agricultural jobs in the United States, including fruit and vegetable pickers, poultry farming, dairy and livestock production, greenhouse work, and produce processing.
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| Olalia speaks with an Anaya official during the raid |
In exchange, each jobseeker was charged processing fees ranging from Php150,000 to Php300,000 excluding medical examination fees.
According to DMW, investigators also found out that Anaya had been conducting orientations I Cebu and Bohol in coordination with local government units and the Public Employment Service Office (PESO) partners.
The same modus was employed by another Cebu-based visa consultancy company, Opportunities Abroad, which enticed applicants to apply for student visas in Canada, but assured them they would be getting in there on a work-study program, and could bring family members along.
Opportunities Abroad and its affiliate company, Pinoy Care Visa Center, were among a number of visa consultancies cited by the DMW in 2024 for alleged illegal recruitment, and warned the public against transacting with them.
The operations carried out under DMW Closure Orders Nos. 13 and 14, Series of 2026, were launched after authorities confirmed that both establishments lacked the necessary permit and licence to recruit Filipinos for overseas work.
Victims or applicants of either company are urged to coordinate with DMW Region VII or the Migrant Workers Protection Bureau for legal assistance and documentation support.
The DMW also urged job-seekers to first verify any overseas job offers, to deal only with licensed recruitment agencies and other official government channels.



















