Responsive Ad Slot

Latest

Sponsored

Features

Buhay Pinay

People

Sports

Business Ideas for OFWs

Join us at Facebook!

No OFW casualty from Mangkhut’s rampage

Posted on 18 September 2018 No comments
A felled tree on Queensway, where many OFWs gather on Sundays

By Daisy CL Mandap


Philippine labour officials say no Filipino migrant worker suffered serious injuries from the havoc created by severe typhoon Mangkhut which lashed Hong Kong for nearly the whole day yesterday.

Labor Attache Nida Romulo said no one had called the Philippine Overseas Labour Office to ask for help, or complain about typhoon-related injuries.

Neither was there any request for assistance for family members who might have been affected by the typhoon which swept across the Philippines earlier.

“We do have a ward at the FWRC (for Filipino Workers Resource Centre, POLO’s shelter) who hails from one of the worst-hit areas in the northern Philippines, and we took it upon ourselves to ask help from our government on her behalf,” said Romulo.

A big factor that may have helped in preventing injuries, including those of migrant workers, was the hoisting of typhoon signal no 10, the strongest possible, early in the day. This, plus the repeated warning that Mangkhut was the most intense storm to ever hit Hong Kong, appeared to have spooked everyone into staying indoors.

A day-after check of the favorite haunts of migrant workers, like the parks in Central and Admiralty and the IFC walkway showed that they were, indeed, well advised not to venture outdoors, as these were among that sustained heavy damage from the storm. 
Lockhart Playground beside POLO

Uprooted trees were everywhere, hours after Mangkhut roared away from the city, including a big one that straddled a main artery of Queensway, where the Consulate offices are located. 

Throughout Sunday, officers from POLO and its attached agency, the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, reportedly kept tabs on what was happening in the community through Facebook and messages sent to them by various people.

They also kept touch with Consulate officials led by Consul General Antonio Morales who reportedly monitored the situation throughout the day.

Welfare officer Virsie B. Tamayao said they did receive a report about Filipina domestic worker Aleya Acero being slightly injured after the rooftop kitchen in her employer’s house in Taipo collapsed, but the victim herself did not seek their help.

In a Facebook post that was shared extensively by Filipinos, Acero posted pictures of the heavily damaged kitchen, and narrated how the collapsed tin roof that ended up covering her head prevented her sustaining more severe injuries.

Aleya Acero had a narrow escape when her employer's kitchen collapsed

Acero said that when another gust of strong wind blew away the tin roof away, she scampered to run to the lower level where her employer’s family had gathered, and were calling out to her, fearing for her safety.

At least one other OFW, Meryl Baron, shared photos of the shattered windows in her room, which she said resulted in all her things getting wet and damaged. She was, however, apparently unhurt.
 
Shattered window in Meryl Baron's room
A report that proved to be totally false was that of a Filipina domestic worker who was purportedly rescued from being blown away by strong winds, after insisting on going out for her day off.

A closer look at the video that was used as basis for the story showed that the supposed Filipina was a teenage boy who had apparently strayed outdoors for unknown reasons. He was eventually brought to safety by an older male companion.  

Tamayao said that all the reports they received about OFWs who may have been affected were all forwarded to the Department of Labor and Employment and to OWWA, which had asked them to monitor the situation in Hong Kong.

Despite the all-clear, POLO officials say OFWs who may have been adversely affected by the typhoon may approach them for help, including those who might have been told by their employers to go out for their day off, despite the extreme weather conditions.



Filipina typhoon victim to undergo second operation

Posted on No comments

By Daisy CL Mandap
The Filipina tourist who was hit by a falling signage suffered injuries to her legs and arms

A Filipina tourist who was hit by falling debris in Tsimshatsui yesterday amid the onslaught of severe typhoon Mangkhut, is set to undergo a second operation in Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Kowloon.

This was according to Consul Paulo Saret, head of the assistance to nationals section of the Consulate, which has been assisting the victim.

Saret said that the Filipina was hit by a falling signage, and sustained serious injuries to her legs and arms. She underwent surgery within hours of being admitted to hospital, but will have to go under the knife for a second time.

She is, however, expected to recover fully from her injuries.

According to ATN’s Danny Baldon, the victim, who is a dentist, had gone out of her hotel room to buy coffee from a nearby 7-11 outlet when she met the accident.
Consul Saret

A sister-in-law who came to Hong Kong with the victim has reportedly provided information about the case to the Consulate.

Earlier reports that spread through wildfire on social media was that the Filipina had died after being hit by a dislodged air conditioner in Mirador Mansions in Tsimshatsui. The story, which rapidly circulated among Filipinos and was even picked up by a Manila TV station, proved to be wrong on all counts.

Saret, meanwhile, is also looking into the filing of a complaint with Hong Kong authorities about a tour operator who had left a group of Filipino tourists stranded for hours near the Tsing Ma bridge at the height of the storm yesterday.

The 36 tourists, who included two children and three seniors, were reportedly picked up by the tour agent at their hotel in Tsing Yi at about 10am, shortly after signal no 10 was hoisted, and were on their way to the airport when the vehicle’s windshield crashed from the strong winds.

The tourists were reportedly left inside the bus with the shattered glass for hours, until someone managed to call the Consulate to ask for help. Baldon immediately called 999, and by around 5pm, the tourists were pulled out of the bus and sent back to their hotel.

Saret said that since the rescue, no one in the tour group had called up the Consulate again, so they assume everyone managed to get on their flights back to the Philippines without a hitch.

Still, he said they will pursue a complaint about the incident to relevant government officials in Hong Kong.

“We have already drafted a complaint letter and intend to send it to the Hong Kong authorities soon,” he said.

Saret said another casualty of Mangkhut’s onslaught was the scheduled legal consultation and forum at the Consulate by members of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines Batangas chapter.

The visiting lawyers had to skip the Sunday session with OFWs, but reportedly passed by the Consulate on their way to the airport earlier today, to pay a courtesy visit to Consul General Antonio A. Morales.





PCG holds outreach on cruise ship

Posted on 17 September 2018 No comments
The Consulate has conducted an outreach on board the cruise ship Star Pisces to provide consular services to its 300 Filipino personnel.

Consul General Antonio A. Morales led the 10-member consular team that conducted the outreach on Sept 7 on board the Star Pisces, which is based at Ocean Terminal in Tsimshatsui.

Morales said the team had performed overseas voting registration and other consular services for the Filipinos who work on the vessel.

He said that the Consulate would be ready to carry out similar outreaches for Filipino seafarers of foreign vessels calling at Hong Kong’s port if he receives a request from the crew or from the ship owners or operators.

Philippine Consulate General representatives, led by Consul General Antonio A. Morales, provided consular services to Filipino crewmembers of Star Pisces, a cruise ship, while docked at the Ocean Terminal in Tsim Sha Tsui. 
“We are ready to extend consular services to Filipino crew of ships that dock in Hong Kong except that we have not received requests and we were told that there are not too many of them because now may of the ships are highly automated so the number of crews is not that high,” ConGen Morales said.

“But if we receive a request, we are ready to send an outreach team,” he said.

Star Pisces is operated by Star Cruises, which dominates the Asia-Pacific cruise market and is owned by Genting Hong Kong. The consul general said the Consulate was requested by Resorts World, Genting’s tourism unit, to undertake the outreach.

Star Pisces Captain Henrik Ortenblad welcomed the 10-member consular team aboard.

Morales then addressed the vessels’ Filipino personnel. Vice Consul Fatima G. Quintin introduced the different consular services.

The team offered services such as overseas voting registration, Social Security System and Pag-IBIG transactions, legal advice, and counseling and advice from the Department of Social Welfare and Development.

The outreach lasted from 10am to 3pm.

Pagnenegosyo, tinalakay sa seminar

Posted on No comments
Ni George Manalansan

Marami sa mga migranteng manggagawa ang nangangarap na makawala sa pangangamuhan at maging ganap na negosyante. Sa isip ng marami, mahirap pagkasyahin ang kakarampot na suweldo, at mas maganda din na magkaroon ng tsansa na maging isang “boss” at mamuhay ng marangya.

Nguni’t hindi sapat ang pangarap para makamit ang ganitong mithiin. Kailangan, unang una, ng pagsasanay at paghahanda para mas masiguro na ang perang pinaghirapan ay hindi mauwi sa wala.

Dinaluhan ng may 75 migranteng mangagawa ang pagbibigay kaalaman at pagsasanay ng Card Hong Kong Foundation, na libre para sa OFWs. 
Ito ang tema ng panibagong entrepreneurship seminar na isinagawa ng Card Hong Kong Foundation noong ika-2 ng Setyembre sa Bayanihan Centre sa Kennedy Town, na dinaluhan ng may 75 migranteng manggagawa na karamihan ay mga babae.

Unang una sa tinalakay ng mga trainor ang mga bagay na dapat isaisip ng isang entrepreneur o negosyante, katulad ng tiwala sa sarili, pagpupursige, pagiging responsable, kakayahang makipagsapalaran, pagtukoy at paghahanap ng oportunidad, epektibong pagpaplano, pagkalap ng impormasyong makakatulong sa negosyo, pagtiyak sa kalidad ng produkto o serbisyo, at paghikayat at pag-aaruga sa koneksyon.

Ipinaliwanag din sa mga dumalo ang mga dahilan kung bakit bumabagsak ang isang negosyo, katulad ng kawalan ng disiplina at paggamit ng kapital sa personal na bagay. Ibinahagi din sa kanila ang kahalagahan ng paggawa ng business plan, at ang mga dapat gawin para manatiling tapat ang mga kostumer.

Sa pangunguna ni Vicky Munar, lead trainor ng Card, tinuruan ang mga kasapi kung paano gumawa ng business plan, bago nagkaroon ng talakayan at pagsusulit para mas lalong dumikit sa kanilang memorya ang mga habilin at leksyon.

Kabilang sa mga lumahok si Marcelino Bate, na ang asawa ay gumagawa ng tinapay at ibinebenta sa kanilang mga kapitbahay. Gusto daw nilang pag-aralang mag-asawa kung paano palakasin at palakihin ang negosyo nang sa gayon ay makauwi na siya at makapiling muli ang pamilya.

Si Rachel Letrakemia naman ay may dalawang tindahan ng sari-sari, na kasalukuyang pinamamahalaan ng kanyang kapatid. Gusto daw niyang magkaroon ng dagdag-kaalaman kung paano niya mapapalaki pa ang kanyang negosyo.

Sa pagtatapos ng pagsasanay ay masayang nagpasalamat ang mga kalahok, bitbit ang pag-asa na balang araw ay maging boss din sila ng kanilang sariling negosyo. Para sa mga susunod na programa paki- like: Card Hong Kong Foundation/ Facebook.

Consulate rescues 36 Pinoys stranded in tourist bus amid typhoon

Posted on No comments


By Daisy CL Mandap 

The Filipino tourists were picked up from Winward 800 Hotel in Tsing Yi

The Philippine Consulate is set to lodge a complaint with Hong Kong’s Travel Industry Council after a group of Filipino tourists were put on a bus bound for the airport at the height of severe typhoon Mangkhut, then left stranded for hours after the vehicle’s windshield was shattered by strong winds.

Danny Baldon of the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section said the 36 Filipinos, who included two children and three senior citizens, were fetched from the Winland Hotel 888 in Tsing Yi at 10am, when severe typhoon Mangkhut had just roared into Hong Kong.

As they approached Tsing Ma bridge, strong winds reportedly shattered the bus’ windshield, forcing it to stop.

But instead of finding ways to get the passengers back to safety, the tour escort allegedly kept them on the bus for hours, until some of them found a way to contact the Consulate late in the afternoon.

“Kami pa ang tumawag sa 999 para ma-rescue sila,” said Baldon.

He said the bus driver offered no credible explanation as to why he did not seek help immediately, and why he insisted on taking them to the airport despite the hoisting of the strongest typhoon signal in the territory.

“Pilit niyang sinasabi na signal no 8 lang nung umalis sila, pero sabi ko, kahit signal 8 lang iyon dapat hindi pa rin sila tumuloy dahil kung ganoon kalakas ang bagyo ay lahat ng public transportation e itinitigil na,” said Baldon.

According to the Hong Kong Observatory, typhoon signal no 10, the highest possible was raised at 9:40am. It was lowered to T8 at 7:40pm, or 10 hours later, making it one of the most intense storms to have hit the city.
Transportation was paralyzed across Hong Kong
Nearly 900 flights were cancelled, stranding 100,000 passengers
This house in Yuen Long had its kitchen wrecked by Mangkhut's strong winds
Even the IFC in Central was not spared Mangkhut's wrath
One of the worst areas affected was Heng Fa Chuen in Chai Wan, where extensive flooding occurred

All the tourists were reportedly driven back to the hotel where they were to spend the night.
Baldon said they were supposed to take different flights back to the Philippines, but it was certain most would not have been able to leave since most planes were grounded as Magkhut lingered in the city for most of the day.

According to local media reports, nearly 900 flights out of Hong Kong International Airport were cancelled during the day, with about 100,000  travelers affected. Several hundred other flights were delayed.

About 100 people are reported to have sought treatment in hospitals due to typhoon-related complaints, but there had been no fatalities. One of the most seriously injured was a Filipina tourist who was hit by flying debris in Tsimshatsui, and had to undergo surgery at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Jordan for wounds to her feet and hands.

According to the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, several Filipina migrant workers had called up their hotline to relay concerns and report slight injuries, but no one required medical treatment.

Filipina tourist injured by flying debris amid Mangkhut's onslaught

Posted on 16 September 2018 No comments

By Daisy CL Mandap

A Filipina dentist visiting Hong Kong has undergone emergency surgery at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Jordan after being hit and injured by flying debris as super typhoon Mangkhut made its presence felt in Hong Kong early today, Sept 16.

The victim's photo as shared by several netizens
A picture of the injured woman was shared by many netizens on Facebook early today, but nobody could tell for sure what had happened to her. Many said she was hit by a falling airconditioner somewhere in Mirador Mansion and had died as a result, but it turned out to be false information.

The picture showed the woman apparently unconscious and all bloodied, and with one leg wounded and sticking out awkwardly.

“Inoperahan siya agad dahil nasugatan ang mga paa at braso, pero ok na siya,” said Danny Baldon of the assistance to nationals section of the Consulate.

Baldon said the woman had gone out to buy coffee in a nearby 7-11 outlet at the height of the storm and was hit by flying debris, but it was definitely not an airconditioner as that would have inflicted far more severe damage.

The woman’s companion reportedly furnished information about the victim.

Baldon said the tourist would likely stay in the hospital for a few days but need not worry about expenses. “I’m sure it would be treated as an exceptional case because she was injured in an accident,” he said.






Cast-out DH cancer victim dies

Posted on 14 September 2018 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao  

Joan, the cancer-stricken Filipina domestic worker who was reportedly driven out by her employer in the wee hours of May 1, 2017 while still on radiotherapy treatment, has died.

The 41-year-old single mother of three succumbed to cervical cancer on Aug 25 in her hometown of Guimba, Nueva Ecija, according to friends and church mates in Hong Kong.

Videos posted on social media by her siblings and friends showed her white coffin being carried by a squad of barangay tanods from her house to a nearby barrio chapel for a religious service and final tribute on Aug 27. She was buried in the village cemetery.

Joan found herself in the street after her employer drove her out in the wee hours of May 1, 2017.
Dozens of people who condoled with her family filled the church and lined up to lay red roses on Joan’s coffin after grieving family members had paid their last respects.

A swift shot from a video camera revealed the emaciated face of the woman who had looked cheerful in her earlier photographs with siblings and friends, long before she contracted the disease that led to her departure from HK.

Joan was reportedly roused from sleep and driven out just after midnight on May 1, 2017 by her employer, for whom she had worked for two years and two months.

The employer packed her belongings in a suitcase and two striped bags and tried to send her off in a taxi to her church’s shelter, saying she had used up all her leave credits.

A fellow Filipina domestic worker took pictures of her looking forlorn on the street, and posted them on Facebook, drawing concern from many people in the community. The concerned Filipina also took her home initially, and brought her to the hospital to continue her treatment.

At the time, Joan was undergoing radiotherapy treatment for Stage 3 to 4 cervical cancer at Tseung Kwan O Hospital in Po Lam. She had her 20th treatment on May 11, 2017.

Among those who visited her at the hospital were officers from the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, who also helped with her repatriation.

 Joan was diagnosed with cancer on Mar. 5, 2017. She was admitted for treatment at the hospital, and was discharged on Mar. 31, with instructions to continue her daily radiotherapy sessions.

Joan had reportedly been advised by the Help for Domestic Workers to file a case under the Disability Discrimination Ordinance against her employer because of the way she was kicked out in the early hours of the morning, sick and fragile. But it would appear the case was never filed.

Manila plugs drug flow to HK, using convicted carriers

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

When tourist Ann Raian Cruz cleared security and Immigration unchallenged at Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3 on the evening of July 30, 2016, she had no idea she was closing a dark and notorious chapter of the gateway’s history.

On arrival at Hong Kong International Airport a few hours later, she was arrested by Customs and Excise for bringing in some 700 grams of suspected cocaine.

Hong Kong has benefited from Philippine anti-drug measures based on information from mules convicted in HK.
But since then, the drug flow from Manila to Hong Kong has stopped, the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency said in a recent letter to the High Court. The letter was submitted by defense lawyers in hopes of reducing the sentences on three convicted Filipina drug mules arrested 10 months ahead of Cruz.

Cruz, a 38-year-old single mother and call center agent in Manila, was the first Filipina drug mule to slip out of NAIA barely a month since President Rodrigo Duterte took office, winning heavily on the back of an anti-drug campaign promise.

Her arrest showed that despite Duterte’s bloody anti-drug crackdown, international drug syndicates continued to use the country as a major transshipment center in Asia, apparently with help from crooked elements at NAIA.

But she appeared to be the last Filipino drug carrier to have passed through NAIA security unchallenged. Duterte’s bloody crackdown has apparently whipped airport security personnel into line.

However, two foreigners carrying drugs still managed to pa ss through NAIA just months after Cruz’s arrest. They were a Venezuelan woman and a Bolivian man who took circuitous routes to Hong Kong via various cities, with NAIA as the last stopover.

 The lawyers for Shirley Chua, Remelyn Roque and Ana Louella Creus secured the letter from PDEA through the Consulate, which in turn coursed the request through the Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila.

In the PDEA letter, it was also said that information given by the three drug mules to ATN had led to the arrest of Nora Noora, the alleged mastermind of the fateful trip on Sept 25, 2015 that landed them in a Hong Kong jail.  A fourth defendant – Maricel Thomas – was acquitted at the end of the trial last Nov 14.

The lawyers told High Court Judge Aubrey Campbell-Moffat the information also led to the capture of Ugandan national Rufus Katumba, the alleged kingpin of the Nigerian drug syndicate in the Philippines, and his Filipino wife Marlyn Ramos in October 2015.

“Basically, we are appreciative of the fact that, through the information given by the three Filipinas, somehow naipadala natin sa Manila and the DFA coordinated with the PDEA, which led to the arrest of Katumba, na apparently ay Nigerian drug trafficking syndicate member or leader,” Consul Paulo Saret told The SUN when asked for a comment.

“Because of the information, I think binigyan naman ng credit ang three ladies dahil sa apprehension ni Katumba. Kasi narinig ko ang sinabi ng judge, ‘They led the authorities to Noora, it was Noora who led the authorities to Katumba’,” the consul said. 

Saret said it appears that the tip-off from Chua, Roque and Creus gave the Philippine authorities the initial impetus to arrest Katumba.

The arrests of Chua, Thomas, Roque and Creus brought to seven the number of Filipinas nabbed at HKIA in 2015 for drug trafficking. This was the biggest annual total recorded for Filipinos in data compiled by the Customs & Excise Department from January 2010 to November 2016.

On Feb 2, 2015, pregnant tourist Catherine Bustillo was arrested when 1.8 kilos of cocaine was found in secret compartments of her hand-carried baggage. She pleaded guilty to trafficking on Sept 25, 2015 and was sentenced on Dec 22 to a “lenient” 14 years and eight months in jail by High Court Justice Kevin Zervos.

Another Filipina tourist, Ma. Cristina D. Dia, was charged with drug trafficking for bringing into Hong Kong 1.3 kilos of suspected cocaine worth about $1.3 million on Sept. 5, 2015.

On July 15 of the same year, Susan Cumpio was intercepted while trying to bring in nearly 2 kilos of cocaine from Brazil. The Filipina had admitted bringing the drugs into Hong Kong as part of a deal to gain liberty from her Nigerian common-law husband in Sao Paulo. She was sentenced to 17 years in jail in May last year after pleading guilty to drug trafficking.

Cruz, the last of the Filipina drug mules to Hong Kong, was sentenced by a High Court judge to 12 years and three months in jail after she pleaded guilty on Apr 8.

Paggawa ng embutido at empanada, itinaguyod ng Card HK

Posted on No comments
Ni Cecilia Eduarte

“Ang pagsusumikap at sigasig na matuto ng karagdagang kaalaman pangkabuhayan ay mabisang sangkap para maabot ang mga adhikain sa buhay.”
Ang mga salitang ito ay nagsilbing gabay sa pagdaraos muli ng pagsasanay pangkabuhayan ng Card-HK Foundation  para sa mga manggagawang Pilipino noong ika-18 ng Agosto sa Bayanihan Centre sa Kennedy Town. Ang itinuro sa mga kalahok ay ang paggawa ng dalawa sa paboritong pagkain ng mga Pinoy, ang embutido at empanada.
Ayon kay Gigi Lingao, isa sa mga tagapagsanay, ang pagluluto ng Filipino-style embutido ay nag-umpisa noong panahon pa ng mga Kastila na sumakop sa Pilipinas ng mahigit tatlo at kalahating siglo. Sila daw ang nagdala sa ating bansa ng kaalaman para sa paggawa ng embutido, na kabilang sa pamilya ng mga sausages.
Payo naman nina Lia Galve at Jhoan Cabudil, katuwang na trainor ni Lingao, mas mainam na gumamit ng dahon ng saging para pambalot ng embutido. Healthy na makakatipid ka pa, dagdag ni Galve.
Samantala, magkatuwang na ibinahagi muli nina Elpie Leba at Pamela Agbao ang kanilang husay sa paggawa ng empanada sa mga sumali sa pagsasanay.
Laking pasasalamat naman ni Farrah Jane Cercado sa bumubuo ng CARD- HK Foundation at sa mga trainor na walang sawang magturo ng  pangkabuhayan. Dahil sa ganitong pagsasanay ay nagagamit nila ang iba nilang natutunan sa CARD tulad ng paggawa ng kutsinta. Sa kanya na raw nagpapaluto ang mga kasamahan niya kapag may espesyal na okasyon sa kanilang dinadaluhang simbahan.
Masayang nagpasalamat din ang ibang kasali sa mga trainor na hindi iniinda ang  pagod at init ng panahon maibahagi lamang ang mga kaalaman pangkabuhayan sa mga kapwa nila OFW. Ito ay parte ng adhikain ng Card OFW HK na tulungang maghanda ang mga migranteng manggagawa sa kanilang pagbabalik-bayan.

Ang susunod na libreng financial literacy seminar ng Card ay isasagawa sa ika-21 ng Oktubre. Sa mga nais dumalo, tumawag lamang sa numero 56002526, 95296392 o 54238196


Embutido 
Ingredients:
2 lbs minced pork
14 pcs Vienna sausage
3-5 pcs hard-boiled eggs, sliced
½ cup sweet pickle relish
½ cup tomato sauce
2 pcs raw eggs
2 cups cheddar cheese, grated
1 cup carrots, minced
1 cup red bell pepper, minced
½ cup raisins
1 cup onion
2 tbsp garlic
¼ cup condensed milk
2 ½ cups bread crumbs
4 tsp salt
dash of pepper

Instructions:
1. Place ground pork in a large container.
2. Add break crumbs, then break the raw eggs and add it in. Mix well.
3. Put in the carrots, bell pepper (red and green), onion, pickle relish and cheddar cheese. Mix thoroughly.
4. Add the raisins, tomato sauce, condensed milk, salt and pepper and mix well.
5. Place the meat mixture in an aluminum foil, and flatten it.
6. Put the sliced Vienna sausage and sliced boiled eggs alternately in the middle of the flat meat mixture.
7. Roll the foil to form a cylinder – locking the sausage and the meat in the middle of the flat meat mixture. Once done lock the edges of the foil.
8. Place in a steamer and let cook for 1 hour.
9. Place inside the refrigerator to cool.
10. Slice and serve. Enjoy!

*Recipe yields 14 pieces of embutido


Empanada 
Ingredients:

For the pastry:
3cups all-purpose flour (375 grams)
¼ cup white sugar (50 grams)
½ tsp baking powder
½ tsp fine salt
½ cup oil or 128 grams butter
1/3 cup water

For the filling:
2 tbsp cooking oil
2 cloves garlic, minced
100 grams onions, minced
¼ kilo ground pork (250 grams)
½ tsp salt
Cooking oil for frying
½ tsp ground black pepper
½ tsp sugar
150 grams French beans, cut small
150 grams potatoes, cut into small cubes
150 grams carrots, cut into small cubes
1 boiled egg

Procedure:
1. Mix the pastry ingredients  and roll dough to1/4 inch thickness.
2. Using a small plate as guide, cut dough into rounds.
3. To prepare the filling, saute garlic and onions.
4. Add the meat, potatoes, carrots snd French bean.
5. Add salt, sugar and bac pepper to taste. Cool.
6. Put a tablespoon of the filling in the middle of each rounded dough.
7. Fold the dough in half and seal the edges by pressing them together with your fingers.
8. Deep-fry until golden brown.
*Note: Ingredients for the filling may vary, depending on what vegetables and type of meat you prefer. For vegetables, red bell pepper and green peas are used most of the time. For the pastry, readymade puff pastry or dumpling wrappers which are available in supermarkets or markets, can be used.


IMAP-HK officers take oath

Posted on No comments
The newly elected officers of the Integrated Midwives Association Hong Kong took their oath of office before Consul General Antonio A. Morales at the Consulate on Aug. 19, along with their adviser, Babes Mercado of Metrobank.

ConGen Morales thanked the midwives for choosing him as their inducting officer, and called on them to continue promoting unity within their ranks.

Those sworn into office were Brenda Atrero, who was reelected president; Phyllis Pugong, vice president 1, Leonora Mangahas, vice president 2; Emma Suenan, secretary; Julie Obispo, asst secretary, Analissa Garcia, treasurer; Alicia Agbuya, asst treasurer; Jocelyn Melegrito, auditor, Lolita del Rosario, PRO; and committee heads Maggie Pea, membership; Genalyn Cachuela, midwifery education; Ma. Elena de Vera, legislation and appointment; Odelie Gannaban, external affairs; and Teresa dela Cruz, internal affairs.

A fellowship lunch followed at Empire Hotel in Wanchai after the induction.

IMAP HK was founded in 2006. For the past 12 years, it has been giving free blood pressure check to migrant workers at the Metrobank office in Admiralty, and at community events where it is invited to take part.

The group aims to promote camaraderie among Filipino midwives in Hong Kong, and provide them with updated training and information about the profession.

According to Atrero, her group is now focused on conducting outreach missions to find more midwives and midwifery graduates who need advice on taking the board examination in the Philippines. Atrero said those planning to take the board are advised to time their vacation in the Philippines on the dates the examination is set to be held.

IMAP-HK is an affiliate of the Integrated Midwives Association of the Philippines. - DCLM

Integrated Midwives Association Hong Kong officers, led by Brenda Atrero, who was reelected president, pose with their inducting officer, Consul General Antonio A. Morales after taking their oath at the Consulate.

Don't Miss