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Ang kalusugan mo

Posted on 11 January 2019 No comments
Kung hindi pa nagkaroon ng libreng test upang malaman ang kanilang blood pressure, blood sugar at iba pa sa ilalim ng Project HealthWise  ng POLO, hindi pa malalaman ng marami sa mga OFW na may problema sila sa kalusugan. At hindi rin natin malalaman na isang health time bomb ang naghihintay na sumabog.



Halimbawa, sa 1,441 na dumaan sa testing, lumabas na 14% ang pre-diabetic (o iyong mataas kesa sa normal ang asukal sa dugo) at 7.63% ang kumpirmadong diabetic — na mas mataas kesa sa 6.2% average na naitala sa Pilipinas.



Sa 1,645 na nagpatingin naman ng blood pressure, 11.24% ang may mataas na presyon, 17% ay may sakit na alta presyon, at 2.5% ang pinayuhang magpatingin agad sa duktor dahil baka bigla na lang silang atakihiun sa puso.

Nakakatakot ang mga bilang na ito, ayon kay Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre.

Hinihingi niya ngayon sa pamahalaan ng Hong Kong na  idagdag sa mga patakaran nito ang pagsailalim ng mga OFW sa regular na medical checkup. Dahil bago pa lang ang panukala, hindi pa alam kung sino ang dapat magbayad nito, o kung gaano kadalas dapat gawin — kung taunan, o tuwing bawa’t pag-process ng kontrata (o tuwing dalawang taon).

Ano man ang kahihinatnan ng panukalang ito, hindi maikakaila na dapat agkarrion ng agarang aksyon dahil, kung pagbabasehan natin ang mga datos na nakalap ng POLO, isa sa bawa’t 20 na OFW ay may diabetes na unti-unting lumalala at hindi nagagamot, at isa sa bawa’t 50 ay namemeligrong atakihin sa puso.



Kaya sa pananaw ng kalusugang pangmadla, ang iinmungkahing patakaran ni Labatt Jolly ay dapat sangayunan ng mga opisyal ng Hong Kong.

Alam natin na bayad ng gubyerno ang pagpapa-ospital ng maysakit, basta’t may hawak silang HK ID. Kung mapipigilan nila ang pagkalat at paglala ng mga sakit, mas kakaunti ang maoospital, at bababa rin ang kanilang gastos pang-kalusugan.



Pero hindi rin natin dapat kalimutan na nakaatang ang responsibilidad sa ating sarili. Hindi natin dapat iasa sa iba ang ating kalusugan. Dapat tayong sensitibo sa mga nararamdaman natin — iyang sakit sa dibdib, o pagkahilo o paninigas ng kalamnan sa suso ay may kahulugan at dapat gawan ng hakbang.


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Self-help FB group celebrates Christmas

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Domestic Workers Corner members gather on Dec 9 at Pier 9 in Central. 


About 100 Filipina domestic workers, most of them newly arrived in Hong Kong, gathered at the Christmas party for members of the Domestic Workers Corner on Dec 9 at Pier 9 in Central.



The program started at 11:30am with a prayer and the lighting of a wreath candle to mark the second Sunday of Advent.



This was followed by an impromptu reenactment of the Nativity scene, with DWC founder Rodelia Villar picking out random members to pay the roles of Mary, Joseph, Baby Jesus and the Three Kings.



The religious tone set for the gathering proved to be a good start for a meaningful celebration of the most important date in the Christian calendar.




Around them two other groups were having their Christmas parties so the place was crowded and noisy, but this did not stop DWC members from having fun.



There were games galore, a raffle and hearty lunch shared by everyone. New members were warmly welcomed into the group, and active leaders acknowledged for their tireless support.

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Ylagan faces 23 overcharging charges in alleged UK, Canada job scam

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Ylagan
By Vir B. Lumicao

Ester P. Ylagan, formerly the leading recruiter of Filipino domestic workers for Hong Kong, appeared in Eastern Court on Jan. 11 to face 23 charges of overcharging brought against her by the Labour Department.

Ylagan, who showed up in a casual attire of jeans and jacket, was represented by private lawyer Andrew Raffell of Pacific Chambers.

But despite the lapse of more than two years since the case was filed, the hearing was again reset to Apr 12 after prosecutors from the Employment Agencies Administration said they needed to consult with the police on a related fraud case.

The prosecution’s application to further delay the case prompted a rebuke from magistrate Yu Chun-pong.

Yu asked why the EAA had to wait for the police probe. The prosecutor replied that  police were also planning to file a money laundering case against Ylagan for taking the workers’ money and moving it to other jurisdictions.

The prosecutor initially asked for a three-month adjournment, then changed it to six months, saying this was to ensure the police investigation would be completed by then.

But Yu was not pleased. He told the prosecutor to ascertain from the police whether they could finish their work in three months.



“You make them understand that this case has been going on for three years,” the magistrate said. He told the prosecutor that EAA must take the case seriously.

Yu ordered the prosecutor to ask the police when they would complete their fraud investigation and to tell them he won’t allow a further adjournment after this.



The prosecutor came back with an assurance from the police that the case would be completed in six months, “the minimum period”.

Despite this, the magistrate set the next hearing for Apr 12, with an order that no more adjournment shall be allowed.



He also told the EAA to start preparing for trial in case the defendant pleads not guilty.

Ylagan’s counsel also protested the further delay, saying his client is accused of a “simple commission case” and need not wait for the police to wrap up its investigation of an alleged fraud case against her.

Raffell also said the agency commission of 10% of the first monthly salary applied only to helpers deployed in Hong Kong but not to recruits for jobs in Britain and Canada.



Further, he said his client was also a victim of fraud and that the delay had “prolonged her suffering.”

The 23 cases filed against Ylagan are just a small fraction of the sworn complaints made by hundreds of Filipino workers against her, who claimed they had been charged by the recruiter between $10,000 and $15,000 for non-existent jobs in Britain and Canada.

The complainants told police Ylagan, co-owner of the former Emry’s Service Staff Employment Agency, used her Mike’s Secretarial Services to entice more than 200 workers to apply for the fake jobs.



Police arrested Ylagan late last year on suspicion of fraud and money laundering. She is out on police bail.

EAA initiated its own investigation after seizing documents from the former offices of Emry’s and Mike’s in Worldwide Plaza in Central.


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Lament of an OFW child at forum on migrant workers’ plight

Posted on 10 January 2019 No comments
Xyza Cruz Bacani


By Daisy CL Mandap

Twenty-three years on, and Xyza Cruz Bacani still remembers the time her mother left their home in the Philippines to work as a domestic helper in Singapore.

“I woke up one day and she was gone, just like that,” the celebrated migrant worker-turned photographer said at a forum on migrant workers’ plight held at the Hong Kong Arts Centre on Dec. 16.

For the then eight-year-old Xyza, her mother’s unexplained departure left a wound so deep it took decades before she could come around to understand that it was more an act of sacrifice than of abandonment.



It did not help that her father, a construction worker who came home only on weekends, made no effort either to explain why her mother, who had been working as a laundrywoman, had to leave.

So, at a very young age, Xyza was left alone to look after two siblings, one five-year-old, and another three.



“For an eight-year-old child, that was not easy to handle,” said Xyza. “I had to grow up fast, even if all I could do was cook noodles for my siblings.”

Another memory that stands out was when Xyza had her first monthly period, and not having any adult to explain to her what was happening, she assumed she was about to die. “So I went over to our neighbor and said, ‘I think I am dying.’’



Her resentment was cemented when, just a month after leaving home, Georgia sent home a picture of her smiling beside a Christmas tree, with several gifts lying around.

“She left in November then sent a picture in December of her surrounded by Christmas gifts. So I said, ‘I hate you!’ and that resentment built up over the years.”



Little did she know that her mother was having her own problems, having been trafficked to Singapore and mistreated initially, until she found her way into the home of a rich and caring employer in Hong Kong, with whom she has been working for more than 20 years now.

Eleven years after her mother left home, Xyza decided to drop out of a nursing course, and work as a domestic helper for the same kindly employer, Kathryn Louey.

But Xyza says she was driven more by the desire to help send her younger brother and sister to school and not to be close to her mother.



“So when I came here I did not know my mother. I kept pushing her away,” she said.

It took three years before she saw how her mother had sacrificed through the years so their family would have a better life.

Xyza first noticed that her mother did not go out during her holidays, which she says could be a throwback to her first employment in Singapore, when she was not allowed to take a day off. Xyza also learned that during those difficult days, her mother was fed only noodles twice a day.

Georgia’s frugal and simple ways have persisted despite being in Hong Kong for two decades.

“Can you imagine being in Hong Kong for 20 years and not having gone into an MTR station, or a bank?”, Xyza, now a globe-trotting photographer, asked her audience.

“That’s when I realized she did not leave us. She has sacrificed a lot.”

One of the speakers at the forum, renowned journalist Sheila Coronel, academic dean of Columbia University’s Journalism School, tackled the ‘profound impact” of migration on the children left behind by the migrant workers.

She said a study shows that three million Filipino children have been left behind by migrant worker parents who have passed on much of the child-rearing to other people. Most affected by the separation are children 8-12 years of age, and its impact is felt more by boys.

Coronel said the Philippines’ labor export program was started as a stop-gap measure to help the country recover from the oil crisis in the 70s, but it has lasted for decades so that there are now second-generation migrant workers like Xyza.

The exodus has continued because remittances from Filipinos overseas remain as the country’s biggest source of much-needed dollars.

But despite the huge dollar earnings from overseas Filipinos, the Philippine government has failed to improve public education and health care.

“So in a way, the government is escaping responsibility for the most vulnerable sectors of the economy,” said Coronel.

Cynthia Abdon-Tellez, general manager of the Mission for Migrant Workers, spoke on how the Hong Kong government has also failed imported workers by enacting policies that diminish, rather than enhance, their rights.

Journalist Zoher Abdoolcarim served as moderator.

The forum was part of a series of activities held to launch Xyza’s  book, “We Are Like Air,” and an accompanying photo exhibit. Xyza says the book’s title refer to migrant domestic workers who play an important role in society yet are often invisible.

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