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Cayetano announces hike in legal aid fund for OFWs

Posted on 20 December 2017 No comments
By Gina N. Ordona

Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter S. Cayetano said the budget for legal assistance for Filipinos abroad has increased, during a forum held at Duke of Windsor House in Wan Chai on Dec. 10.

Speaking to a group of more than 100 overseas Filipino workers, Cayetano said that the budget for legal assistance fund (LAF) has gone up to Php 400 million from Php100 million, and assistance-to-nationals (ATN) fund to Php 1 billion from Php 400 Million.

“Ibinilin ng pangulo na kailangan kapag may legal problems ang ating mga kababayan ay asikasuhin agad. Kaya from any legal distress, puwede nang gamitin ang legal assistance fund,” said Cayetano.

He said that the implementing guidelines for making the bigger budget more accessible to OFWs in need are now being drafted. Under the new rules, the fund will be immediately available from the time of the distressed OFW’s arrest until the final resolution of the case.

Under Republic Act No. 10022 known as the Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act of 1995, the legal assistance fund will only be released to aid OFWs facing charges, in filing cases against erring or abusive employers abroad, or to pay for bail and other litigation expenses.

Cayetano also confirmed President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s announcement during his second state of the nation address last July that the ATN fund would be jacked up.

“Ang utos po natin ay huwag sayangin pero huwag tipirin.” Marami po kasi ang napapauwi, let’s say taga-Cagayan de Oro or taga-Gensan. Ang ticket po, hanggang Maynila lang. Wala man lang pangkain at ticket pauwi sa kanilang bayan,” Cayetano said. ATN fund is allocated for distressed Filipinos abroad for their transportation, food and other assistance.

Cayetano also unveiled the government’s plan to create a program that would protect the investments of OFWs in the Philippines. He said the Department of Trade and Industry will be providing up to Php1million “soft loan budget” for OFWs.

“I’ll try to give the guidelines right away to the Consulate. Kasi kung puwede naman na ang mga kamag-anak ninyo ang mangutang sa atin, bakit hindi. Una, it’s safer for you and that gives them also some responsibility,” he said.

Araw ng Karapatang Pantao, ginunita

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Pinaikutan ng mga nag-martsa ang isang parte ng Chater Road, na nagsilbing entablado sa pagpapahayag ng niloloob.
Ni George Manalansan

Nagsagawa ng kilos-protesta ang isang grupo ng mga migrante noong ika-10 ng Disyembre sa Central, bilang paggunita sa pandaigdigang selebrasyon ng Araw ng Karapatang Pantao.

Pinangunahan ng Bagong Alyansang Makabayan Hong Kong at Macau (Bayan HK-Macau) ang martsa na nagtapos sa Chater Road bandang alas-4 ng hapon.

Tinuligsa ng mga nagprotesta ang extra-judicial killing o ang pagpatay sa libo-libong katao sa Pilipinas sa ngalan ng kampanya laban sa droga ng pamahalaan ni Pangulong Rodrigo R. Duterte. Kabilang sa kanilang mga isinigaw ay: “Puro pangako, walang pinag-iba! Puro paasa, walang pag asa!”., “Walang pagbabago sa ilalim ni Rodrigo!”, “Kami ay aktibista, hindi terorista!”, “Stop killing the poor!”, “Stop human rights violation!”

Ayon kay Bayan chairperson Eman Villanueva, kailangang manindigan ang mga migrante laban sa maling ginagawa ng mga pulis sa Pilipinas na pinapatay ng parang insekto ang mga pinaghihinalaang gumagamit o nagtutulak ng droga. Ayon sa kanya, marami sa mga pinatay ay inaapakan, inihahampas, kinakaladkad palabas ng bahay kahit nasa gitna ng hapunan, at pagkatapos ay babarilin at tatawaging adik. Gawain daw ito ng mga pulis dahil binibigyan sila ng quota para sa kanilang mga napapatay.

Diin ni Villanueva, hindi dapat patayin ang isang tao ng walang “due process”, o kaukulang paglilitis sa kasong isinampa laban sa isang akusado. Dapat daw silang dalhin sa korte para malaman kung tunay silang nagkasala, at hindi basta-basta na lang pinapatay.

Pinalakpakan nang husto si Villanueva, lalo na nang sabihin niya na ang laging target ng mga pumapatay ay ang mga mahihirap na nakatira sa mga barong-barong, at hindi ang mga sindikato na nagkakamal ng pera dahil sa pagbebenta ng droga.

Kinondena din ni Villanueva ang pagpatay sa nagtataguyod ng karapatang pantao gaya nina Tito Paez at Bishop Alberto Ramento, samantalang hindi man lang inaaresto ang mga pulitikong gahaman, mayor na may kaso ng panggahasa o pagkamkam ng lupa, at iba pang abusadong opisyal ng gobyerno.

Kabilang sa mga nagsalita si Dolores Pelaez ng United Filipinos in Hong Kong (Unifil-Migrante) na nanawagan sa alahat na manindigan para sa kanilang karapatan at pagpapahalaga sa buhay ng bawat Pilipino.

Sabi pa niya, marami sa mga migranteng manggagawa ang kinakabahan dahil hindi nila maproteksiyunan ang kanilang pamilya sa Pilipinas, katulad ng kaso ni Kian de los Santos, isang anak ng OFW na pinatay gayong hindi naman drug addict.

Nanawagan si Pelaez sa gobyerno ni Duterte na itigil na ang pamamaslang sa mga inosente para  hindi na madagdagan pa ang 13.000 na napatay.

Kabilang sa mga dumalo ang ilang mga pari at pastor. Isa sa kanila, si Pastor Joram Calimutan, ang nagsabi na ang pangulo daw ng Pilipinas ngayon ay isang makabagong Herodes.

“Naririnig ng Diyos ang ating karaingan at alam ang ating kalagayan”, ang sabi ni Pastor Joram. “Ang pinaka mainit na lugar sa impiyerno ay hindi para sa mga makasalanan ,bagkus ito ay para sa mga walang ginagawa para itama ang kasamaan.”

Ayon sa isang tagapagsalita Ang ating Pangulo ng bansa ngayon ay isang Makabagong Herodes. Naririnig ng Diyos ang ating karaingan at alam ang ating kalagayan.  ang sabi, ang pinaka mainit na lugar sa impiyerno ay hindi para sa mga makasalanan ,bagkus ito ay para sa mga walang ginagawa para itama ang kasamaan.

Sa bandang huli, nagkaisa ang mga dumalo, kabilang ang ilang mga pari at pastor, na magsindi ng kandila bilang tanda ng  kanilang panata na ipagpatuloy ang pakikibaka para sa hustisya at karapatang pantao.

Nagtapos ang programa sa pag-awit ng “Bayan Ko.”

Consulate issues warning, PEYA posts apology over flights mess

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A distressed passenger 
By The SUN Staff

The Philippine Consulate in Hong Kong has advised the public against transacting with PEYA Travel, as hundreds more of the company’s customers who had hoped to be home in time for Christmas failed to board their flights on Tuesday, Dec. 19.

“The Consulate General of the Philippines in Hong Kong SAR is deeply concerned over the incidence of unissued and unconfirmed bookings of Filipino nationals supposedly purchased from PEYA Travel,” said a statement posted on the Consulate’s Facebook page at 7:15 pm on Dec. 19.

“In this regard, the public is advised not to transact with PEYA Travel until such time that this issue is resolved and all aggrieved parties have received just compensation.”

The statement urged the complainants to keep calm, while calling on PEYA Travel to take responsibility for the ticketing mess.

About two hours later, PEYA responded with an apology to all affected passengers, and said it was taking full responsibility for what happened.

“Makakaasa po kayo na pinagsusumikapan namin at paninindigan ang lahat ng responsibilidad kaugnay nito,” said the statement posted on PEYA’s Facebook page.

However, the apology fell largely on deaf ears, as most of those who responded gave vent to their anger at being left stranded at the airport, or uncertain about whether they could still fly home in time for the holidays. Most demanded a refund, while some called for sanctions against the travel agency.

One said it would have been her first time to spend Christmas with her family in 10 years, while another shared how frustrated she was that she may not have the chance to see and talk to her child who didn’t want to speak to her.


At PEYA’s shop at World Wide Plaza in Central, hundreds of irate customers demanded a refund after failing to board their flights, or learning that their bookings had been canceled by airlines reportedly because the agency failed to pay for their tickets.

Police kept constant watch at the shop, and at the close of office hours invited PEYA’s marketing manager Arnold Grospe for questioning at the Central Waterfront station.

Grospe who had been manning the shop solo since Monday when word of the booking mess spread, was allowed to leave the station about five hours later with no charges being laid.

Irate passengers swarmed PEYA's office
By mid-afternoon, more than 300 bumped off passengers and others who were scheduled to fly home from Dec 19 onwards with supposedly confirmed bookings had trooped to PEYA, waving so-called itinerary receipts at Grospe as they demanded their money back.

Grospe reportedly tried to appease the customers by promising a refund sometime after the New Year but did not specify the date.  
Grsospe faced the mad passnegers alone

He scribbled “Refund applied Dec 19” on the itinerary receipts then asked the complainants to sign below the notation. Some refused, saying it could be a ruse which PEYA could later claim as proof they had been paid back.    

A Caucasian employer who was one of the estimated 50 complainants packing PEYA’s small office insisted to get back the money he paid for his helper’s ticket. “I want a refund now,” he demanded angrily.

Another employer, a Hong Kong woman who declined to give her name, told The SUN she also asked Grospe to return her money, but he only replied: “You can shout at me but I can’t do anything.”

The employer said she had been sourcing her helpers’ air tickets from PEYA because it was reliable. “We have never had this kind of problem,” she said. For the Dec 23 flight, the employer paid more than $2,000 when she booked it for her maid in June.

But when the helper called Cathay Pacific to reconfirm her flight, an airline staff said her booking was not confirmed because no payment was ever received. PEYA said it was due to system glitch.

Grospe reportedly gave the same excuse to the other complainants, many of whom disbelieved him.

The employer would not believe that. “If it was indeed a system breakdown, would it last two months?” she exclaimed.

Police kept the crowd in check
Yet another Hong Kong employer, Mrs Cheng, went to World-Wide Plaza after her maid called her and told her about the fiasco. The helper bought her ticket in October and was due to take her vacation from Dec 22 but discovered her booking was cancelled for non-remittance of the payment.

One woman from Bacolod, carrying a year-old boy, cried as she vented her frustration at her fouled up travel plans. “This should be my first Christmas vacation is more than six years and my children are anticipating it,” she said.

The woman said she felt so bad because her flight was set for Dec 22, but, when she called the airline after hearing about the mess, she was told she had no booking. Yet, she had a supposedly confirmed itinerary receipt.

“This is too much. I’ve looked forward to this vacation. My children are waiting for me and now everything’s all muddled up,” she said.


Three batches of angry victims went to the Consulate on Dec 19 to seek help, but they were advised to take their complaints to the Travel Industry Council in North Point, a staff at the assistance to nationals section said.

WorldRemit to invest in the Philippines

Posted on 19 December 2017 No comments
The Philippines will host the new regional center of WorldRemit, a leading digital money transfer service.

The company had earlier raised $40 million to drive its next phase of growth, starting with the setting up its Asia-Pacific regional center in the Philippines, its biggest receive market, to handle customer queries. A hundred jobs are expected to be created in the Philippines by the end of 2019.

Currently sending from over 50 countries to 148 destinations, WorldRemit will also use the funding to expand its mobile-first digital service into new markets.

The investment comes at a time of significant company growth across the APAC region which now accounts for more than 25% of WorldRemit’s global money transfers. In the Philippines, WorldRemit's largest receive market, the number of transactions has grown at more than 100% over the last year.

The new center in the Philippines, along with its existing operations in Denver and London, will ensure that WorldRemit customers have access to a round-the-clock service across the globe.
WorldRemit handles a growing share of the $600 billion migrant money transfer market, better known as remittances.

Michael Liu, Regional Director for APAC, comments: “WorldRemit was founded because we believed there was a better way for customers to send money home to their families and communities.”

He added: “This new funding will not only allow us to expand our network and service in the Philippines, but also build our regional centre which will allow us to create more jobs for the country’s economy as well as improve our service to customers globally. “

Since its last funding round in 2015, WorldRemit has launched 206 new services across the globe and has grown its transaction volume by 400%. Last month WorldRemit became Arsenal FC’s first-ever online money transfer partner. 

The Series C round was led by LeapFrog Investments - a dedicated equity investor in emerging markets, supporting fast-growth firms that deliver social impact alongside commercial returns. The round also had    significant participation from existing investors Accel and Technology Crossover Ventures (TCV).

This latest funding round follows a Series B investment raised from TCV in 2015 and a Series A from Accel and Project A in 2014 - then one of the largest ever Series A rounds in Europe. 

Scores of PEYA customers stranded, held up at airport

Posted on 18 December 2017 No comments
Irate customers flock to the Worldwide Plaza office of Peya Travel.

By The SUN

Around 200 Filipinos, mostly foreign domestic workers on their way home to the Philippines for the Christmas holidays, were left stranded or held up at Chek Lap Kok airport over the past two days when their tickets issued by Peya Travel were not honored at the check-in counters.

The scenario could recur in the next few days ahead of Christmas, as hundreds more Filipinos who could have booked with Peya prepare to go home to spend their much-awaited vacation with family members.

Most of the stranded passengers said they were told by airline staff that the travel agency had failed to pay for their tickets, but Peya’s management blamed the fiasco on a technical glitch.

Peya’s owner Rhea Donna Boyce, told The SUN via online chat that she discovered the booking problem on Saturday and “I was really furious about it,” she said, without going into details.

Boyce said she managed to rebook the tickets on Sunday of around 100 passengers who were unable to board their flights, even if it meant paying $3,200 for each one-way ticket to Manila. She said the return tickets issued to them by Peya cost only $2,080 each.

But today, around the same number of passengers encountered the same problem, and many of them descended on the Peya office on the third floor of World Wide Plaza in Central to complain, some with police in tow.

The travel agency’s staff members were so unnerved by the invasion of the irate customers that they walked out on their jobs, leaving only the sales director, Arnold Grospe, to deal with the complaints.

The angry passengers included Belen, an OFW from Bicol who was on her way home for the burial of her father-in-law, which had already been postponed for five days to await her arrival.

Belen, like many others who could not board their flights on Monday, was furious because her relatives had rented a vehicle so they could pick her up at Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila for her scheduled arrival at 8pm so they could get to Bicol in time for the burial.

Belen rushed to PEYA’s office at mid-afternoon after finding out about the fiasco at the check-in counter, and was verging on tears as she angrily demanded her money back.

“May emergency kami tapos ganito pa ang nangyari. Ibalik nila ang pera ko,” she said, adding that the $5,000 she had paid for her ticket was her last money, and did not know where to get more cash to buy a new one.

Another was Perla Santos, who went to HK International Airport early as she was supposed to leave on the 7:50am flight of Philippine Airlines, but was shocked to learn that she was not on the list of passengers.

After fuming for hours at the airport, she decided to just book a 7:20pm flight to Clark Airport aboard Cebu Pacific so she would at least arrive home within the same day.

Like Belen, her relatives had hired a vehicle to pick her up in Manila, but on learning that she failed to board her scheduled flight,  they decided to go back home to Pampanga. They told her to just call them when her plane had landed in Clark.

Another customer, Vhie Azares Endaya, said she was concerned about her children who had been preparing to fetch her at the airport in Legaspi City, because she would miss her 10pm flight tonight. “Actually, my employer would be happy that I would not be leaving,” she added.

“Hindi birong pagod,gutom at puyat ang binuno namin para kitain ang pinambili namin ng ticket na yan kahit pa napakamahal makasama lang namin pamilya namin,” she said later in a Facebook post.

Many furious passengers swarmed over Grospe, demanding a return of their money.

“Bakit, anong nangyari? Ibalik nyo ngayon din ang pera namin para makabili kami ng panibagong ticket. Naghihintay na ang mga anak ko sa airport,” an angry OFW who rushed back to Central from the airport along with her luggage shouted.

Grospe, who frantically tried to help file applications to refund the tickets of the passengers, told The SUN he was unsure what had caused their bookings to disappear from their system.  “Parang na-virus,” he said.

The affected passengers were mostly on Philippine Airlines and Cathay Pacific flights; they were booked but not confirmed. He also found out, upon checking, that some of the passengers on Cebu Pacific had confirmed flights. 

Grospe offered to process refund claims as a crowd filled the Peya office, asking them to leave copies of their booking form, receipt and HK identification card to support their applications.

But he added that he could not promise the complainants when or how much refund would be paid.

At any one time, about 20 irate customers crowded in front of Grospe, who listened to their complaints and assured them they would get rebooked, or get their money back.

Earlier in the day, complainants called police who sent investigators and made inquiries.

The Travel Industry Council (TIC) also sent staff to inquire about complaints it had received. It was not yet known what actions TIC will take but a search of the directory of travel agents indicates that Peya is still listed.

“They (TIC) know about this already. We have reported this to them,” Grospe told an employer who inquired on behalf of her helper who missed her flight today.

TIC is the government agency that issues licenses to travel agencies. It also administers the Travel Industry Compensation Fund, under which up to 90 per cent of the cost of the tickets could be recovered in case the issuing travel agency closes, as long as these payments include its 0.15 per cent levy on the cost of air tickets.

The scene at the airport is no less chaotic.
Some of those who came back from the Hong Kong International Airport said there was a bigger crowd of OFWs there who were unable to leave because their names were not on the flight manifest of either PAL, Cathay Pacific or Cebu Pacific.

PAL’s country manager, Leah Nicolas, was also at a loss when asked what could have gone wrong with Peya’s bookings, but said that as far as the airline is concerned, “the tickets were not issued”.

Nicolas said that PAL does not get bookings directly from Peya, as it is not accredited with IATA (International Air Travel Association). That means Peya had to go through an accredited agency to get the airline to issue the tickets, which did not happen.

“But in the past, we have had passengers booked through Peya and we didn’t have this kind of problem, so this is really strange, ” Nicolas said.

Asked if it was possible for PAL to deploy extra flights to accommodate the hundreds of mainly overseas Filipino workers who made their bookings through Peya and are scheduled to depart within the week, Nicolas said she could try asking.

“We can check but there’s a big demand for our aircraft right now because of the holiday season,” she said.

Nevertheless, Nicolas said she would send a staff member to Peya to inquire how they could help ease the burden on the affected passengers. 

Many of the passengers who had been bumped off their flights also sought help from the Consulate, to ask if they could take action.

But the Consulate’s acting head of post, Roderick Atienza, said “There’s really not much that we can do at this stage because we still don’t know what really happened. The culpability or lack of it by the agency still has to be established.”

Nevertheless, he said he expected the agency to “fix the mess”, and that the Consulate will continue to monitor the situation to make sure the affected OFWs get appropriate help.

Among those who sought the Consulate’s  help was Ma Teresa Macatangay who told the assistance to nationals section that when she checked her PAL flight on Dec. 22 which she booked through Peya she was told that her booking had not been confirmed.

Macatangay said she paid $3,700 for her return air ticket originally, and was asked by Peya to pay an additional $1,700 when she rebooked her return to Jan. 2. She was angry that despite shelling out so much money, her hope of spending the holiday season with her loved ones now look uncertain.


Govt gets flak for putting president’s photo on OFW ID

Posted on 17 December 2017 No comments
Militant overseas Filipino workers in Hong Kong have given the thumbs down to the newly launched OFW ID, also known as iDOLE, for featuring a big color picture of President Rodrigo R. Duterte in front, alongside that of the holder.

This was despite an announcement from Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello IIII that the ID would be given away free, in contrast to his previous statement in July that employers would be charged for the card, causing an uproar among OFWs.

Bello, in succeeding announcements, said the design will not be altered because there had been no formal objection.

Duterte himself had said in the past he did not want his picture displayed in government offices, as well as in government-issued documents.

“Kelangan talagang may mukha ng presidente ang OFW ID? Iilan pa lang ang nabigyan, baka pwede pang alisin ito,” said Eman Villanueva, chairman of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan Hong Kong and Macau.

Villanueva likened it to disgraced President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s move to put her picture on Philhealth cards which were given away free to poor Filipinos ahead of her bid for re-election in 2004.

Other OFWs posted on Facebook that they’d rather not have the ID, saying they didn’t want to keep Duterte’s picture inside their wallets.

Some Duterte supporters, however, said the President may not have approved of the card’s look himself, as he is known to have even ordered government offices not to display his photo on their walls.

The much-awaited OFW card was unveiled by Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III on Dec. 7, who said he had issued it to a limited number of returning overseas workers, calling it President Duterte’s “best gift” to them.Bello said the OFW ID, which was on its first phase of issuance, was intended to test and secure the features of the Integrated Department of Labor and Employment eServices.

“This is only the first phase of implementation and will cater first to our Balik-Manggagawa until the system is ready for all OFWs. We are doing this to secure the database and for further improvements in the system,” Bello said.

Backtracking to a promise he made to OFWs in Hong Kong last year, he said that the OFW ID is free, as it will be funded by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration.

“This is free for our OFWs. We do not want our OFWs to shoulder the cost because this is a gift from the President to recognize their sacrifices and immense contribution to our economy,” he said.

During an interview with assistant secretary for communication Mocha Uson in July, however, Bello clarified that the ID was free for OFWs but employers would have to pay for the cost of production. A price of Php500 plus Php200 for postage was originally floated as the cost of obtaining one.

Balik-Manggagawa, or vacationing OFWs, are required to log into their BM Online accounts to apply for the ID, which they can use to avail themselves of travel tax and terminal fee exemptions.

 They can log in and create an account with the iDOLE.ph or the iDOLE One-Stop Online Facility/Portal and apply for the OFW ID by inputting their latest and valid OEC number. The unique ID is equipped with decrypted QR code for security.

 The DOLE said the ID will free OFWs from queuing up to transact with agencies for OECs, as they can access government services online in further phases of the iDOLE eServices implementation.

The first phase links DOLE with the Department of Foreign Affairs, Philippine Overseas Employment Administration, OWWA and the Bureau of Immigration.

PH eyes deal on sending OFWs to China by next year

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano sees China’s “Belt and Road” initiative as an opportunity to supply the Chinese mainland with Filipino talent, such as professionals, including English teachers.

Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano
The foreign secretary, who was a guest at a “Belt and Road” trade fair at Chater garden on Dec 1, said he is hoping for a breakthrough in moves to secure an agreement by the end of the first quarter of 2018 on exporting Filipino workers to China.

“The sooner any agreement that would give the Filipinos legal protection is good, and although they are treating the Filipinos very well, to be staying in a country legally and having a work contract is more desirable,” Cayetano told The SUN.

“So, we’re hoping to have a breakthrough in the first quarter next year because of the relationship getting better and better and many cooperation agreements going,” he said.

But he said the government is not only focusing on the employment, “but also on how to better the lives, especially through education, of our workers abroad, so that they will have a career path, a ladder where they can improve their situation as the years go by”.

He said China, especially Beijing, has programs for expatriates and workers, but Filipino workers are not covered as they do not have job contracts there.

“It’s a matter of getting the agreement and seeing which programs will be available to them,” he said.

He said China is very keen to hire English teachers, such that its foreign minister had followed up talks about getting the teachers from the Philippines.

“It’s even their foreign minister who followed up and their Belt & Road initiative will be a very big idea that will affect the world and especially our region, and even the Chinese themselves have said that they not only need the cooperation, collaboration, but they will need the best talents from all over the world, and they recognize Filipino talent,” he said.

Cayetano said the Philippines would need to do a balancing act because it sends workers out to earn for their families and help the economy, but it also have to keep the best people at home “so we can develop and we don’t want to see people separating from their families”.

He said the ideal setup is one like in the US, where Filipino nurses can bring their spouses who can’t work, for a year. He said this is better than separating families.

In a press briefing in Macau, Cayetano said he had a “short and fruitful meeting” with Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam, partly about the OEC suspension that effectively stopped the deployment of all new overseas Filipino workers from Manila. But the issue became moot when Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III lifted the 15-day suspension as scheduled on Dec. 1.

Cayetano said his talk with the CE covered the human trafficking issue, but only in relation to the OEC. But he said the Philippine government is quietly talking with countries which are take-off points for traffickers like Hong Kong.

Whether it is illegal recruitment, white slavery or all other types of trafficking, this has to be addressed, he said. “It’s only when we consider it as a transnational crime, meaning it is not only a problem on one side, on the Philippine side, but it’s a problem among nations, can we truly address it,” he said.

“Both with Hong Kong and China, we are also stepping up our intelligence so that we can identify more (culprits), especially illegal recruiters or the people who are doing the trafficking,” Cayetano said.



Hirap nang dahil sa OEC

Posted on No comments
Mahigit dalawang oras nang nakapila papasok sa Philippine Overseas Labor Office si Ate Magdalena, 61 taong gulang at taga Ilocos Sur, nang mapansin siya ng isang volunteer. Dahil hindi na kailangang pumila pa ang mga senior citizen ay tinanong si Ate Magdalena ng volunteer kung ano ang sadya nito.

Ipinakita agad ni Ate Magdalena ang email at password ng kanyang BMOnline account, sabay sabi ng, “Ne, patulong naman aakyat ako kuha ng OEC”.

Naawa na naaliw ang volunteer kaya tiningnan muna ang e-mail address at password nito, at sinubukan siyang I log-in gamit ang kanyang sariling cellphone. Nabuksan naman ang account ni ate kaya na-edit pa ng volunteer ang ilang impormasyon bago siya inaplayan ng OEC exemption.

Naglapitan naman ang ilang tao sa pila para malaman kung makakatulong ba sa kanila ang paliwanagan. Sinabi ng volunteer kay ate na hindi na niya kailangan pang pumila para makaakyat para sa OEC dahil puwede iyang ipakita na lang ang kanyang exemption number.

Ngunit hindi pumayag si ate na wala siyang hawak na papel katulad ng dati. Naisip ng volunteer na gamitin ang mismong telepono ni ate para doon kunin ang exemption number nito at ipa print sa amo, pero wala pala itong smart phone.

Kahit anong paliwanag ng volunteer ay hindi pa rin maintindihan ng matanda kaya sinamahan na lang siya ng volunteer sa isang computer shop para doon ipa print ang kanyang exemption slip. Kahit nagbayad ng $15 sa isang pirasong papel ay natuwa pa rin si ate dahil hindi na siya kailangan pang pumila ulit.

Ibinigay ng volunteer ang kanyang pangalan at numero para sa susunod na pag-uwi ni ate ay tatawagan na lang siya nito para matulungan. Si Ate Magdalena ay 32 taon na sa Hong Kong nguni’t hanggang ngayon ay hindi pa rin maintindihan ang proseso ng pagkuha ng OEC exemption para masiguradong makakabalik siya sa kanyang trabaho sa Hong Kong pagkatapos magbakasyon sa Pilipinas - Rodelia Villar

Kumusta na?

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“Uuwi na yata ako ate, ilang buwan ko pa lang dito pero nahihirapan na ako.” Ito ang naging kasagutan ni Lorna nang kumustahin ng kapwa niya kunyang na noon lang niya nakita, at nakasabay lang sa paglalakad.

Malungkot kasi ang mukha ni Lorna sa araw na iyon kaya kinumusta siya ni ateng. Sa sinabing iyon ni Lorna ay naikwento ni ateng na mayroong mga OFW na mas malala pa ang sitwasyon sa kanya ngunit nagtitiis dahil alam na marami sa mga Pilipino ang nangangarap na sa Hong Kong makapagtrabaho. Iniisip daw nila na kapag uuwi sila ay wala naman silang mapapasukang trabaho na ang suweldo ay mahigit sa beinte mil (Php20,000) sa isang buwan.

Napag-isip isip si Lorna sa tinuran ni ateng, bago ngumiti, sabay sabi ng “Pinapatibay mo ang loob ko ate”.

Pagkaraan lang ng ilang araw ay nagkalubong muli ang dalawa sa daan, at kitang-kita sa mukha ni Lorna ang saya dahil sinunod daw niya ang pangaral ni ateng na dapat ay kausapin ang amo kung mayroon siyang hindi naiintidihan sa mga sinasabi sa kanya.

Dahil dito ay naging masiyahin na siya. Paggising daw ng mga amo sa umaga ay nag gu good morning siya sa kanila, at good night naman bago sila matulog. Higit sa lahat ay nakukuha na niyang alukin sila ng maiinom kapag dumadating sila galing sa trabaho, gaya ng tsaa o kape.

Iyun lang at mukhang nakuha na niya ang kiliti ng mga amo, kaya malamang daw na tatagal din siya sa Hong Kong katulad ni ateng na naka ilang dekada na dito. Naisip ni ateng na may malaki din palang epekto ang pagbati sa mga nakikita na malungkot, dahil ang kaunting pagpapakita ng malasakit ay malaki ang nadudulot na ginhawa, lalo sa mga bagong dating na OFW. S

i Lorna ay 28 taong gulang, dalaga at mula sa kabisayaan. Namamasukan siya ngayon sa mga among taga Shatin. – Marites Palma

Sisante bigla at walang nakuhang bayad

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Nahulog mula sa kuna ang 18 walong buwan na alaga ni Hanna habang nagluluto siya ng pagkain para sa isa pa niyang alaga na 4 na taon at sa 80 taong gulang na lola.

Pinababa siya ng among Intsik ng walang karampatang bayad at sinabihan na sa agency na lamang sila maghaharap. Pagdating doon ay tinakot daw si Hanna ng tauhan ng agency para pumirma siya sa termination letter dahil siya naman daw ang may kasalanan sa pagkahulog ng kanyang alaga.

Kahit wala naman daw makita na galos man lang sa bata ay sinabi ng ahente sa kanya na baka makulong pa siya pagkalipas ng ilang araw dahil baka may makita nang diperensya sa alaga.

Marami sa mga kaibigan ni Hanna ang nagsabi na huwag siyang pipirma sa termination letter pero ginawa pa rin niya. Dahil dito ay wala siyang nakuhang isang buwang sahod kapalit ng pasabi, kundi ang sahod lang sa mga araw na pinagtrabaho niya, at para sa tiket pauwi sa Pilipinas.

Tinangka niyang maghanap ng ibang amo sa mga ahensya ngunit puro tanggi daw ang inabot niya. Nawalan na siya ng kumpiyansa sa sarili kaya nagdesisyon siyang umuwi na lang na masama ang loob, lalo at naalala niya na hindi siya binibigyan ng amo ng pagkain sa umaga at pati kumot niya ay siya ang bumili.

Si Hanna ay 30 taong gulang, may asawa at anak, at tubong Cagayan Valley. Ang dating amo niya ay nakatira sa Shau Kei Wan. – Marites Palma

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