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On Hong Kong’s Live-in Policy

Posted on 08 September 2018 No comments
This was a short statement read by Gina “Jhic” G. Dacio at the Legislative Council hearing on July 16, 2018 in which she urged for the amendment, if not scrapping, of the Hong Kong government’s live-in policy for foreign domestic workers. Dacio, who is 43 and has been working as a domestic helper in Hong Kong for the past 16 years, is from Tabuk City, Kalinga. She is chairperson of Share Hong Kong Society.

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Good afternoon, I am Gina Dacio, a domestic helper and from the Philippines and the chairperson of Share Hong Hong Society. Thank you for giving me this opportunity to speak. This is my first time here. I am lucky because most domestic workers cannot even come to LegCo. I had to ask for time off to come here today. 

I’d like to start with a question. Can you imagine, if you have to live in your employers’ home, in a space that’s only as big as your bed, and may be waken up during the night to work? How would you feel? Do you think this is a healthy work situation? My answer is no. This is against the rights of the helper. But this is happening to many domestic helpers in Hong Kong.

The law in Hong Kong states that we should have suitable accommodation and reasonable privacy. But according to the Mission for Migrant Workers, 2 out of every 5 of its clients do not have their own private room, 9 out of 10 experience long working hours and insufficient sleep, and 34% work over 16 hours every day. 


Today, I would like to bring up the Live-in rule that foreign domestic helpers are longing to be changed and amended. This rule has led to countless cases of physical abuse and unsatisfactory, even inhumane living conditions. Migrant workers are often given tiny bed spaces to sleep in, and suffer from insufficient food and insufficient sleep due to long working hours. Also, employers and their family members are able to command the worker to do chores, even in the middle of the night.

These are all forms of breaching foreign domestic helpers’ rights, and of abuse that may lead to foreign domestic helpers becoming seriously ill, or even die.

In this regard, we must all remember Erwiana Sulistyaningsih, the Indonesian domestic helper who suffered extensive abuse at the hands of her employer which nearly caused her death.

If this rule has no chance of being amended, at least require employer to provide their foreign domestic helpers decent bed space to sleep and rest in, not in a toilet or in the kitchen, or on the sofa in living room, or the floor. Require the employers to give us sufficient food or food allowance, at least 11 hours of rest, and respect and treat us as  human beings, like they are. All of these would ensure that foreign domestic helpers are able to build up enough body resistance to sustain them through their daily routine.

I hope my message would create an impact and bring about changes and freedom from discriminations in this society. This would allow us to continue to provide better service to your families and respond to all your needs because our work makes this city function.

Kapag tumaba...

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Isang sulyap lang sa Facebook ay mapagtatanto natin na marami sa mga OFW sa Hong Kong ay tumataba, o kung hindi man, ay nag-”gain weight”. Wala namang masama dito. Nagpapakita lamang na masarap ang pagkain natin, at masarap talaga tayong kumain.

Magkakaproblema lang kung, sa paghahangad na mabalik sa dati nating kaseksihan, ay kung anu-ano ang ating inumin, kahit pa ito ay nakasasama.

Sa tagal namin ditio sa Hong Kong ay kung anu-ano nang paraan ng pagpapayat ang nauso. Kung epektibo nga sila, bakit lumubog-lumitaw lang sila sa paglipas ng panahon?

Ang pinakamakamandag ay ang mga “gamot” kuno na iniinom.

Natatandaan mo pa ba, halimbawa, ang Thai slimming pills? May kakilala kami na imbes pumayat ay lalong tumaba dahil dito. Mayroon namang tinamaan ang atay at naospital nang mapansin na ang balat niya ay naninilaw, dahil may sangkap pala itong lason.

Ang pinakabago ngayon ay ang Susuya. Nagiging popular ito dahil high-tech kung bilhin, ika nga, dahil makikita ang nagbebenta nito sa internet. At dahil nga high-tech, ipinagmamalaki pa ng mga umiinom nito na sila ay nagpapa-slim sa pamamagitan ng pag-inom nito —na para bang ito ay status symbol na nakakaengganyo sa iba.

Puwes, may masamang balita kami para sa kanila: Nagpalabas na ng warning ang Department of Health (DH) laban sa produktong ito.

Sinabi ng DH na may sangkap itong Sibutramine na isang lasong pampasuya sa pagkain at naka-ban sa Hong Kong mula pa noong 2020 dahil nagsasanhi ito ng sakit sa puso, at Bisacodyl na isang pampatae na nagsasanhi ng sakit ng tiyan.

Maliban sa warning na pangkalusugan, sinabi ng DH na kung mahuli kang nagbebenta ng Susuya, maaari kang parusahan ng multang $100,000 at pagkakakulong ng dalawang taon.

Kaya mga ate, kung gusto nating magpapayat, gawin ito nang tama upang hindi tayo mapahamak. Ibang usapan na, ika nga, kung kalusugan natin ang nakataya.

Simple lang ang natural na paraan upang makamtan ang gusto nating pigura: ang pagbawas ng kinakain (o ang pagkain ng mas maraming gulay) at pagbabanat ng buto sa pamamagitan ng ehersisyo.

‘We are not slaves’

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By Daisy Catherine L. Mandap

This is something that Hong Kong, being the world-class city that it claims to be, will never admit: that many migrant workers are being treated like virtual slaves here.

For just over $4,000 a month, foreign domestic workers are expected to work for as long as their employers want them to, and that means 12 hours on average daily. Some, as several studies have shown, actually work for 16 hours straight, leaving them with just eight hours to attend to personal needs, and sleep.

For most, this also involves long hours of backbreaking work – non-stop cleaning, marketing and cooking, taking young wards to and from school, washing and ironing clothes, and just about anything that the employer could fit in a day.

The expectation, fueled in large part by the government’s mandatory live-in policy, is that a foreign domestic worker must be able, and willing, to do all the household jobs set out by the employer, at practically all hours of the day.

What makes it worse is that many workers, on top of not having enough rest periods, are not given a decent place for rest and sleep. Well-documented are the cases of domestic workers being made to sleep in storage rooms, laundry areas, terrace, the sofa in the living room, kitchen floor, and even the toilet.

But despite the recurring reports of such blatant disregard for the safety, health and welfare of migrant workers, the government has not done much to ease their plight. For the longest time, the only positive step it has taken was the ban on dangerous window-cleaning, and only because our Consulate, particularly Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre, had taken the initiative to put a stop to the disgraceful practice.

Given this scenario, it is just right for support organizations like the Asian Migrants Coordinating Body to start taking a new tack in solving these age-old problems plaguing foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong.

Instead of reiterating its previous call for minimum work hours, AMCB is now demanding 11 hours of uninterrupted rest for migrant workers. This means that a domestic worker would still be at the beck and call of the employer for up to 13 hours – but nothing longer than this.

And instead of pressing for a more detailed description of what “suitable accommodation” in the standard employment contract of migrant workers means, AMCB is now calling for some sort of an exclusion provision, in which all the unsuitable sleeping areas are listed down. This should end, once and for all, any subjective interpretation of this vague provision in the contract.

But beyond these, AMCB and its affiliate organizations are keeping up the fight for a more humane treatment of migrant workers overall. This includes raising their minimum wage to $5,500 a month, a figure they say is based on hard data and not on some amorphous calculations, as what the government is wont to do.

Less strident but no less reasonable, is the call to raise the food allowance to $2,500 a month. At this rate, a worker who is not given free food by the employer or facilities for cooking, will get an extra $100 daily, which is a fair amount, given that an ordinary lunch box in fast food outlets costs upwards of $40 nowadays.

Still in the cards is the demand to make live-in arrangements optional, and for the policy that requires all terminated workers to leave Hong Kong within 14 days, scrapped.

There are still many other problems confronting migrant workers that need to be addressed, including the persistent overcharging of fees by employment agencies, the failure of the police to immediately act on cases involving them, and Immigration’s apparent crackdown on those whose contracts are terminated prematurely.

But for now, AMCB’s Eman Villanueva says what his group is asking for are the bare minimum – a living wage, a decent place to sleep in, and basic protection from abuse for one of society’s most vulnerable sectors.

Surely that’s not asking for too much?


University lecturer reminds OFWs about life goals

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By Ellen Asis

Why did you leave home to become an overseas Filipino worker?

This was the initial question raised by Dr. Ju Chen Chen, an anthropologist and senior lecturer at Chinese University,  to  about 50 participants in a workshop titled “Understanding the Journey,” held at the Consulate on Aug 26.

Ju said that from her experience dealing with migrant workers their life story is not all the same, and it is not all about money.

And OFW interacts with Dr. Ju Chen Chen, an anthropologist and senior lecturer at Chinese University.
There are two stereotypes that emerge from the answers given by migrants as to why they decided to work overseas. The first is a filial daughter or a generous mother who sacrifices herself for her family; the other is a curious and sometimes rebellious youth who takes the chance and the risks involved, just to see the world.

One participant named Sarah said that she decided to work in Hong Kong because she believes that the city is the land of entrepreneurs, and all the experiences that she has gained will help her to become a successful businesswoman in the future.

Another participant named Edna said that she left the Philippines because she needed a break and space from her husband.

Yet another named Odi said she left home when she was just 22 years old because her father had died and she needed to earn money to support her younger siblings. Now she feels lucky to have found good employers, for whom she has been working for the past 23 years.

A participant named Sayra gave the funniest answer. She said she decided to leave the Philippines because she wanted to experience flying on an airplane.

She also regards her stay in Hong Kong an educational one because she gets the chance to learn different skills and join activities she sees as empowering.

It is also a continuing learning experience. For example, her employer has taught her that small tomatoes are called cherry tomatoes, a piece of information she thinks is very useful.

Ju said that many Filipino migrants worker find alternative ways to enjoy their stay, like joining activities such as beauty pageants. Through this activity, a Filipino domestic worker often dubbed as “Checherella” manages to transform herself on a Sunday into a well dressed and confident person, which is very much different from what she is like when she works during the rest of the week.

Ju said that in one of the beauty pageants she attended one of the contestants said she only wanted to gain experiences and stories that she can tell to her grandchildren.

 Deputy Consul General Roderico Atienza who introduced Dr. Ju said the participants very privileged to have someone from a different nationality who is willing to help Filipino migrant workers gain an insight and understanding about their journey as migrant domestic helpers.

The seminar was a collaborative effort between the Consulate and Wimler Foundation.

DH locked up 21 months for burglary, illegal work

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A Filipina domestic worker has been jailed 21 months in jail by a District Court judge on Sept 5 after she pleaded guilty to charges of burgling a firm in Central in February and taking $180,000, and breaching her condition of stay by working part-time for the firm.

Rachel Rosimo, a 35-year-old mother of two, stood calmly in the dock as Judge Frankie Yiu pronounced her sentence.

The judge gave the convict a discounted 20 months for burglary and a shortened sentence of 2 months for breach of condition of stay, with the latter to be served starting on the 19th month of the first sentence.

District Court.
Having been detained for seven months before Wednesday’s sentencing, Rosimo will have to spend only 14 more months in jail.

Rosimo was originally accused of trespassing on Feb 3 this year, along with unknown persons, into the office of Sante Barley (Hong Kong) Ltd. on the 10th floor of Lansing Bldg along Queen’s Road Central and making off with $180,000.

She was also charged with breaching her condition of stay to work only as a domestic worker by taking up employment with the company.

In an amended charge read in court on Sept 5, the prosecution said Rosimo told police investigators in her sworn statement that she worked as a part-time administrative staff of Sante Barley doing sales reports, inventory counting and cashier customer service. 

The convict said she and another Filipino, Ronato Bagui, were Sante Barley’s only staff.  

On the morning of  Feb 3, Rosimo called up Bagui and told him the office had been broken into. Bagui rushed to the office and found the $180,000 cash missing from the box where he had locked it up the previous evening. The money represented sales of health products that the company marketed.

Police examined the building’s CCTV footage on Feb 3 and saw Rosimo, dressed is black and wearing a mask, entering Lansing House at 7:47am and leaving at 7:56 am. They arrested her outside the office on Feb 6 and she admitted to stealing the money.

Cash totaling $15,990 made up of bank notes of different denominations was recovered from her room in Wanchai.

In a video-recorded interview the same evening, Rosimo told police she was instructed by a Filipino couple named Jessica and David to open the office door and tell them where the money was. She said she did as told and the couple entered and took the money.

She said Jessica and David had promised to pay her loan at Public Finance, and indeed paid $6,000 to the lender. They also gave her an additional $10,000 with a promise to repay her loan balance.

The prosecution said there was no trace of Jessica and David. Except for the money recovered in Rosimo’s Wanchai room, the rest of the loot was still missing.

The defense lawyer said in mitigation that Rosimo, who took up an engineering course, came to Hong Kong in March 2017 to work as a domestic helper. She has an 8-year-old son and a 6-year-old daughter. Her husband is a construction worker.

The lawyer said Rosimo had taken out a loan to build her family a house.     

Pinay denies indecent assault on local man

Posted on 07 September 2018 No comments

Eastern Court.


In an unusual case, a Filipina domestic helper is set to be tried on charges of indecently assaulting a local Chinese man, right inside her employer’s flat.

Ivy Rebustillo appeared before Magistrate Peter Law in Eastern Court on Sept 6 to face one count of “common assault” and another count of “indecent assault”.

Rebustillo, who is out on bail, denied both charges, and will now have to stand trial on Oct. 6.

The prosecution said the offenses allegedly took place in a residential flat along King’s Road, North Point on June 30 this year. No other details of the alleged incident were mentioned in court.

Prosecution also said they had taken a statement, a video recorded interview with the alleged victim referred to only as “Mister X,” lasting one hour and 17 minutes. They also have a 30-minute CCTV footage showing the alleged offenses.

The duty lawyer handling Rebustillo’s defense said he he would challenge the video recorded interview during the trial. - Virgilio B. Lumicao


  


612 qualify for Sept 30 LET

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A total of 612 aspiring public school teachers among Hong Kong-based Filipinos have been approved by the Professional Regulation Commission to sit for the Special Licensure Examination to held in the city at the end of September.

The complete list of both qualified examinees this year for the annual licensure exam has been  uploaded on the Facebook page of the Philippine Overseas Labor Office.

There are potentially 319 elementary teacher examinees this year from Hong Kong compared with 215 last year. For secondary teachers, 293 have qualified for the test, including six who will be taking the exam in the Philippines.

Gemma A. Lauraya, president of the National Organization of Professional Teachers – Hong Kong Chapter, noted that the list may have grown longer this year because of the SPIMS program of the government.

SPIMS, or “Sa Pinas Ikaw ang Ma’am, Sir,” is a joint program of the Department of Labor and Employment, National Reintegration Center for OFWs and the Department of Education and Culture to encourage teachers who had gone abroad to work as domestic helpers to return home and teach.

This year's LET may be held again at Delia Memorial School -Hip Wo in Kwuntong because of its facilities that are ideal for the exam.
Education Undersecretary Jesus Mateo had said last year that 81,000 new teachers’ posts would be added this school year to the Philippines’ public school system because of the Kindergarten to Grade 12 program that extended the number of years of learning for students before they can go to college.

POLO has not yet announced the venue for the exam, but it is likely to be held at Delia Memorial School -Hip Wo in Kwun Tong because of its facilities that are ideal for the exam.

Lauraya said final coaching sessions organized by NOPT and handled by Carl Balita Review Center will be held this Sunday and on Sept 16. She said more than 250 teaching aspirants have been attending the review classes.

“Sana lang, better results this year than in previous years,” said Lauraya when asked about her expectations for the passing rate this year. Only 13% of the 460 who sat for the exam last year have passed, a poor performance compared with around 50% the first time the LET was held in Hong Kong several years back.

Lauraya said the venue this year is likely to be Delia Memorial School-Hip Wo in Kwun Tong, the site where the Civil Service Examination was held in November 2016 and the LET in September last year.

“Most likely Delia ulit po iyan, kasi yung facilities po, eh,” she said. In terms of pricing, Delia charged $40,000 for the use of its classrooms and facilities last year, compared with the hefty $200,000 that POLO paid for an exhibition hall at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre in 2016.

Lauraya said she had received messages from individuals who could not find their names on the list. She said this could be due to problems with the new directives on payment of the exam fee or discrepancies in their documents that led to their applications missing the deadline for submission.

She said three are missing from the list and a few others have commented on her post that their names had been misplaced on the list.

For instance, there were those who indicated they would sit for the Social Studies test but were now on the list for Technology and Livelihood Education, Lauraya said.

Filipina helper held in jail for alleged ‘ice’ trafficking

Posted on 05 September 2018 No comments

 By Vir B. Lumicao


A Filipina domestic worker is being held in Tai Lam Correctional for Women after being arrested in May for alleged drug trafficking.

Analyn de Leon, who has been working in Hong Kong since July 2016, appeared in West Kowloon Court on Sept 3 on a charge of trafficking in a dangerous drug.

It was not clear if she was arrested on her return to Hong Kong from the Philippines.

With De Leon’s arrest, there are now at least 32 Filipinos, a number of them men but mostly women,  being held in various Hong Kong jails for drug-related charges. Six males of the 32 are male long-time inmates serving their sentences.

The lone male who is awaiting trial was arrested in June last year after apparently delivering 2 kilograms of cocaine to two Latin American men in Yaumatei, according to the Consulate.

De Leon, along with three other Filipina drug trafficking suspects, are being held in Tai Lam pending the resolution of their cases.

Prosecution stated in court that it would oppose any bail application for De Leon, even while the defense said it had no instructions from the defendant to apply for bail.

Magistrate Ada Yim adjourned the hearing until Oct 2 for further investigation.

Records at the Consulate show that De Leon was arrested by customs officers at the Hong Kong International Airport on May 4 this year.

The Consulate’s assistance to nationals section managed to verify with the Philippine Overseas Labor Office that De Leon was an OFW from Calamba City, Laguna.

  

Filcom’s big brother going home with heavy heart

Posted on 04 September 2018 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

Filipinos in Hong Kong will surely miss their “big brother” at  the Consulate when he ends his tour of duty in late August.

Hermogenes Cayabyab, Jr.
Hermogenes Cayabyab, Jr., who is known to many as “Kuya Junie,” has endeared himself to the community for his role as the Consulate’s liaison with the Hong Kong police, Immigration, hospitals and other relevant government agencies on concerns of sick and troubled Filipinos.

Fifty-year-old Cayabyab is set to return to the Home Office on Aug 25, exactly six years after coming to Hong Kong in 2012 to join the assistance to nationals section, the Consulate’s office that attend to Filipinos who need help.

His replacement, Arnel de Luna from the Home Office, arrived in Hong Kong on Aug 17 and started going around with Cayabyab to familiarize himself with his prospective duties and meet contacts.

“Siyempre nakakalungkot umalis kasi … community ang trabaho natin,” Cayabyab said in a recent interview.

“Sabi ko nga, napakalaking pribilehiyo, napakalaking blessing kasi yung attachment ko sa community plus yung nature ng trabaho ko dito parang nagkakatulungan na,” he said.

Cayabyab said Filcom groups, in particular his own community, the Couples for Christ, were saddened by the news that he would be returning home soon.

On weekends, he would visit various Filcom groups to bond with them or listen to their problems, and on occasions, comfort Filipinos who are seriously ill in hospitals, or check on the condition of those who are in jail.

“Kapag tinatawagan nila kami sa ospital, alam na nila kasi may direct number ako sa ospital para mapapabilis (ang tulong), lalung-lalo na yung mga hindi kaya ng OWWA,” he said.

He was referring to cases where the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration is unable to extend help, as in the case of overstaying Filipinos who can’t access free medical services.

Among those particularly saddened by his impending departure are long-term Filipino prisoners like Mario delos Reyes, who is serving a life sentence for murder at Stanley Prison. The inmate, who is a prodigious and talented writer, is said to have vowed to write a story about Cayabyab.

Asked for the most memorable case he has handled in Hong Kong, Cayabyab said it was when he had to spend New Year’s Day near the Chinese border with a domestic worker who was searching for the burial site of her sister who had earlier gone missing and then found floating at sea.

“On New Year’s Day, we were in Sandy Ridge Cemetery up on the hills of Lowu. We had requested for police assistance and the officers showed us pictures of those buried there, then drove us to the spot,” Cayabyab said. It was a place where the police buried unclaimed bodies, as they believed the dead was a mainlander, he said.

Once the grave was found, Cayabyab sought the help of local workers to exhume the body, then had it packed and shipped home. To this day, he said the deceased’s sister would visit him regularly and hear mass at the Consulate.

Because of the case, he said he became friendly with the local police and correctional officers, making it easier for him to liaise on cases and obtain access to OFW inmates.

“Kahit na Linggo iyan, (kung) gusto kong pumunta doon, dalhin ko yung mag-ina ko, parang pasyal lang. Kapag may emergency na itinatawag nila, madali lang (puntahan),” he said. He said he had given the police his mobile phone number so they could easily reach him at any time or day.

According to Cayabyab, the most difficult part of his job is breaking bad news to the families of workers. “Kailangang iparating mo nang mahinahon sa kanila, kasi kung minsan merong hahagulgol bigla. Kailangang pakikiramdaman mo muna by phone ang iyong kausap. Kasi minsan, mayroong maysakit, baka ma high blood,” Cayabyab explained.

Whatever assignment he takes on, he heeds the advice of his superiors to act immediately once he gets the details of a particular case.  He says he looks up to his bosses because they had gone through the most difficult selection process, making them experts.

Hong Kong was Cayabyab’s third and first full-term foreign posting since joining the Foreign Service 25 years ago. His first foreign assignment was Doha, Qatar, and then Syria, where he had to help in the rescue and repatriation of workers trapped in factional fighting there.

He says Doha was his most exciting post, as conditions there are far different from here.

“Doon kasi sa Doha, yung mga nakakulong, ang tingin nila pag dumarating ako, parang anghel, eh. Kasi walang dalaw doon kundi ako. Ikaw lang talaga ang maaasahan nilang darating, kaya pag dumating ka talagang tuwang-tuwa ang mga iyan,” he said.

Filipinos there behave better than their kababayans in an “open city” Hong Kong, he said. In the Middle East, they are law-abiding because they are afraid of being thrown into jail in the middle of the desert, “Tatakas ka man, walang kang pupuntahan.”

Cayabyab will be leaving with his wife Merlyn, who also used to work with the Foreign Service, and their Chinese-speaking daughter who is in second year high school at Rosary Hill School.

In Manila, he will be working in the Office of the Undersecretary for Migrant Workers’ Affairs, where he said he will remain accessible to Hong Kong OFWs.

Kathniel, umamin na may relasyon

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Anim na taon na ang love team na KathNiel nina Kathryn Bernardo at Daniel Padilla, at ang kanilang mga pelikulang pinagtambalan ay kumita ng husto sa takilya. Sa promotion ng kanilang pinakabagong pelikulang “The Hows Of Us”, ginulat nilang dalawa ang publiko sa pag-amin na limang taon na silang magkarelasyon. Bagama’t matagal nang ipinapakita ng dalawa ang sweetness nila sa isa’t isa, ngayon pa lang nila kinumpirma ang matagal nang hinala ng lahat. Ayon kay Daniel, napilitan na silang umamin dahil naubusan na raw sila ng dahilan para itago pa ito.

Masaya daw sila, at marami silang natututuhan sa isa’t isa. “ Sa personal at propesyonal, s’ya lang ang kasama ko. Happy ako ngayon,” ang sabi pa ni Daniel.

“Kung hindi mo nakikita future mo sa tao, ba’t ka magi-stay? Kami ni DJ, kapit-kamay kami kasi we see a future together,” ang sabi naman ni Kathryn. Seryoso daw ang kanilang relasyon kaya napag-uusapan na rin ang tungkol sa kasal at pagkakaroon ng pamilya, at maging ang disenyo ng kanilang bahay sa hinaharap. Ang gusto ni Daniel kapag sila ay ikinasal ay malaking church wedding, at ang kanilang fans ay maghihintay sa labas. Pero si Kathryn ay mas gusto raw ang intimate beach wedding, na ang kasama lang ay ang kanilang mga pamilya at kaibigan. Sa Pilipinas din niya gustong magpakasal dahil marami namang magagandang beach dito, at masyadong mahal daw pag magpakasal sa ibang bansa.

Hindi pa naman daw ito mangyayari agad dahil marami pa silang dapat gawin, “basta wag lang masyadong matanda” ang dugtong pa ni Daniel. Sa ngayon ay masaya rin ang kanilang kani-kanilang pamilya at mga kaibigan para sa kanila dahil parehong silang nagma-mature ng maayos at responsable pagdating sa kanilang mga trabaho. Pareho silang mababait na mga anak at kapatid sa kanilang pamilya at ayon sa malalapit sa kanila, ay hindi nagbago o lumaki ang ulo kahit sikat na sikat na sila.

Ang director ng kanilang pelikula na si Cathy Garcia Molina ay nagsabi na ang KathNiel ang magiging katulad nina Sharon Cuneta at Gabby Concepcion o Nora Aunor at Tirso Cruz III pagdating sa kasikatan bilang loveteam, na nang lumaon ay naging mahuhusay na mga artista.

LJ AT ROCHELLE, BUNTIS 
Magkasunod na nagpahayag ang mga Kapuso actresses na sina LJ Reyes at Rochelle Pangilinan na sila ay nagdadalantao.

Ibinalita ni LJ ito sa pamamagitan ng isang video sa You Tube na may pamagat na “A Pleasant Surprise” kung paano niya ipinaalam sa kanyang anak na si Aki ang kanyang kundisyon, na sa bandang huli ay ipinakita pa niya ang kopya ng sonogram (imahe ng internal organs na mula sa ultrasound) ng kanyang tiyan. Hindi agad napaniwala si Aki, 8, (anak ni LJ sa Kapamilya actor na si Paulo Avelino), kaya tumulong pa si Paolo Contis na ipaintindi sa kanya na totoong buntis ang mommy niya. 

Ibinahagi rin ito ni Paolo sa Instagram:  ”YES WE ARE! God has blessed us with the perfect gift and we couldn’t be happier! We want to thank our families and friends who are as excited as we are. And to you @lj_reyes ... When we became a couple 3 years ago, I felt so lucky!With all the problems I had,  all the baggage I carry, you still accepted me and became my partner and strength. Yes, we do have our bad days (dahil matigas ang ulo ko) but we always manage to be okay and happy...And now that we are expecting... I promise to be beside you all the way. You will never ever be alone. Thank you for everything my love! Mahal na mahal kita! We feel so happy and blessed and we just can’t help but share this great news with everyone. Now, let’s celebrate!!” #BabyContis2019"

Apat na buwan nang buntis si LJ sa kanilang magiging anak ni Paolo, na tatlong taon na niyang karelasyon. Ito ang magiging pangalawa niyang anak, at pangatlo naman kay Paolo, na may dalawang anak na babae, sina Xonia at Xalene, sa dati niyang asawang si Lian Paz, na may iba na ring pamilya ngayon at naninirahan sa Cebu.

Samantala, masayang ibinalita rin kamakailan ni Rochelle Pangilinan at asawang si Arthur Solinap na magkakaroon na sila ng anak. Ito raw ang pinakamagandang regalong natanggap nila pagkatapos nilang ipagdiwang ang kanilang first wedding anniversary noong August 3.

Tatlong buwan na ang ipinagbubuntis ni Rochelle at marami na raw siyang nararanasang pagbabago, kabilang ang mga nakakahiligan niyang kainin ngayon, na dati ay hindi niya gusto, gaya ng hamburger. Matiyaga rin siyang inaalalayan ni Art, gaya ng pagbibigay sa kanya ng salabat tuwing gabi, na nakakatulong upang maibsan ang morning sickness niya. Naaawa daw siya minsan sa asawa niya pag nag-crave siyang kumain ng pagkaing gusto niyang kainin dahil uutusan niya itong bumili gaya ng Chowking siopao o kaya’y lugaw. Ayaw din daw niyang nakikita si Art, at ayaw ding maamoy ang pabango nito, pero gusto niya itong tinatawagan para marinig lang ang boses. Dahil dito, marami ang humuhulang magiging kamukha ng anak nila ang ang tatay nito, na hindi masama dahil guwapo, matangkad at mestizo si Art.

Pinayagan din ng kanyang doctor na magtrabaho pa si Rochelle, kaya nagagampanan pa niya ng maayos ang role niya sa TV series na “Onanay”. Buti na lang daw at hindi kontrabida ang kanyang papel kaya magaan ang kanyang pagtatatrabaho. Pwede pa rin daw siyang magsayaw basta’t hindi ito “buwis-buhay” at may exercises pa rin sa gym na puwede sa kanya.

REGINE, LILIPAT SA ABS CBN?
Malakas ang bulung-bulungan na lilipat na sa ABS CBN si Regine Velasquez pagkatapos ng kanyang show na The Clash ng GMA Network. Magtatapos na sa Sept 30 ang show na isang singing contest, na hino-host ni Regine. Balitang hindi na magre-renew ng kontrata si Regine, at katunayan ay nagpaalam na rin daw ito sa mga kasamahan sa isa pa niyang show na “Sarap Diva”. Tatapusin na lang daw niya ang natitirang episodes nito, bago magpaalam ng tuluyan.

Ilang beses na ring napabalitang lilipat si Regine tuwing magtatapos ang kanyang kontrata sa Kapuso network, pero ngayon ay tila tuloy na tuloy na ito. Isang malaking dahilan marahil ay upang makasama na niya sa isang bakuran ang kanyang asawang si Ogie Alcasid, na ngayon ay muling gumanda ang career dahil muli siyang nabigyan ng pagkakataon na balikan ang kanyang unang hilig, ang pag-awit. Kaya naman naging malaking tagumpay ang kanyang katatapos na anniversary concert, na sinuportahan din ni Regine, mga anak, at matatalik na kaibigan. Bukod dito, lagi pa rin siyang napapanood sa ibang Kapamilya shows, gaya ng ASAP, It’s Showtime, ang katatapos na Your Face Sounds Familiar Kids, at sitcom na Home Sweetie Home.

Nami-miss na rin marahil ni Regine ang umawit at magkaroon ng musical show, dahil mula nang nawala ang musical show na SOP ay wala nang outlet ang mga Kapuso singers. Marami siyang mga dating kasamahan at kasabayang singers ang napapanood pa rin sa ASAP at sa mga shows sa ibang bansa na sa hinaharap ay maari rin niyang makasamang muli.

Nanaisin din siguro ni Regine na muling makagawa ng pelikula, dahil sa ngayon ay isa ang Star Cinema sa mga iilang natitirang film companies na masipag pa ring gumawa ng pelikula.

Sa ngayon, mag-aabang-abang na lang muna ang mga fans ni Songbird kung ano at saan ang susunod niyang project.

PAULO BILANG GREGORIO  DEL PILAR
Excited na si Paulo Avelino dahil mapapanood na sa mga sinehan sa Sept 5 ang kanyang pinakamalaking pelikulang nagawa, ang “Goyo, Ang Batang Heneral”. Gagampanan niya ang papel ng bayani at pinakabatang heneral noong panahon ng digmaan na si Gen. Gregorio del Pilar, na kilala noon sa palayaw na Goyo.

Ito ang pangalawa sa tatlong pelikula na tungkol sa mga bayaning Pilipino sa direksyon ni Jerrold Tarog. Nauna nang ginawa ang Heneral Luna noong 2015 na kumita ng husto kaya nakabawi ang mga producer sa malaking pera na nagastos dito.

Dahil sa tinamo nitong tagumpay ay naglakas-loob muli ang mga producer nito na gumawa pa ng dalawang pelikula, itong Goyo, Ang Batang Heneral; at ang pangatlo na gagawin pa lang, ay tungkol sa dating pangulong Manuel Luis Quezon, na pagbibidahan naman ni Benjamin Alves.

Ang mga producer ay ang TBA Studios, Artikulo Uno at Globe Studios.

Ang iba pang artista sa Goyo ay sina Gwen Zamora bilang Remedios Nable, na girlfriend ni Goyo; Arron Villaflor bilang Joven Hernando, na siyang nagkukuwento; Rafa Siguion Reyna bilang kapatid ni Goyo na si Col. Julian; Carlo Aquino bilang Col. Enriquez na best friend ni Goyo; Mon Confiado bilang Emilio Aguinaldo; Epy Quizon bilang Apolinario Mabini; Alvin Anson bilang Gen. Jose Alejandrino; Empress Shuck bilang Felicidad Aguinaldo; Che Ramos bilang Hilaria Aguinaldo; RK Bagatsing bilang Dr. Simeon Villa;  Matt Evans bilang Lt. Carrasco; Benjamin Alves bilang Manuel Quezon; at marami pang iba.

Sa panayam kay Paulo kamakailan, sana raw ay kumita rin ang Goyo para magkaroon muli ng pondo para sa susunod pang historical movie na gagawin.

Sinabi rin niya na napagod siya ng husto kaya gusto muna niyang magkaroon ng break o mahaba-habang bakasyon pagkatapos ng sampung taong paggawa ng pelikula at sunud-sunod na TV series. Pero hindi pa rin ito mangyayari agad dahil kahit pinatay na ang karakter niya sa Asintado ay kasama na naman siya sa isa pang TV series na General’s Daughter na pagbibidahan ni Angel Locsin at malapit nang mapanood.

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