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Posted on 03 March 2019 No comments
“Babae Ipagbunyi (Celebrate Women): Empathy in a Click” 
A photo exhibit by Joan Pabona, OFW and Second Placer in the National Geographic Wheelock Youth Photo Competition
Mar 10-17
Venue: Philippine Consulate Gallery
With: Free Photography Workshop (Limited slots only)
Mar 17, Sunday, 10am to 12:30pm
Organized by PCG with Wimler Foundation and Chinese University of Hong Kong
To register for the workshop, please send an e-mail to gadhongkongpcg@gmail.com with you name, mobile number and subject title “PHOTO WORKSHOP”



International Women’s Day 2019 Celebration
Mar 8, 2:30-4pm
Venue: G/F, 28A Fortress Hill Road, HK
Organized by: Caritas Asian Migrant Social Workers Project
There will be games, gifts, food and performances
For enrollment, please contact us :
Phone: 2147-5988 or
Whatsapp: 5497-2899

Visayas Festival 
Mar 17, whole day
Edinburgh Place, Central
Event will feature all the colorful festivals of the Visayan Region, including Sinulog, Dinagyang, Ari-Atihan and Masskara
Organized by: Visayas Alliance
Contact: Nerissa Jimena



Free Financial Literacy Seminar
Sunday: Mar 24, June 23, July 21
Saturday: Apr 13, Aug 17
Organized by: CARD HK Foundation
To reserve your slot, call 56002526, 54238196 or 95296392
Guaranteed no networking involved.
Free handouts provided and certificates will be given

Basic Computer Literacy:
Mar 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
Morning Class: 10am-1pm
Afternoon Class: 2pm-5pm
Venue: Computer Room, 18th floor, POLO



Ribbon Folding
Mar 3, 10, 17, 24
9am-12nn
Computer Room, POLO
Money Wise: Financial Literacy Training for Migrants
Mar 2 (Saturday), 9am -1pm
Venue: POLO Training Rooms 1&2
All participants are required to pre-register. Please check the Facebook page: OWWA Hong Kong Livelihood and Training for more information on how to join.











Sali na!

Posted on No comments
Overseas Voting for the Philippine Mid-Term Election will be held from Apr 13-May 13, 2019 at the Bayanihan Centre in Kennedy Town
Know the candidates for the senatorial posts as well as the party-lists, and what they stand for.
“Let’s strengthen our democracy. It’s our right and duty.”
Let’s all vote.

Wanted: Filipino nationals to serve as member of the Special Board of Election Inspectors. 
Details here:
https://www.facebook.com/PHLinHK/photos/a.407494936119352/966151100253730/?type=3

HealthWise: A Free Basic Medical Check for OFWs
Daily, except Friday
Venue: POLO Office, 18/F, Mass Mutual Tower, 33 Lockhart Rd., Wanchai
Organized by: Philippine Overseas Labor Office HK in collaboration with Filipino Nurses Association HK and Balikatan sa Kaunlaran HK
Service includes free health assessment after blood pressure and glucose tests, cholesterol and uric acid tests, as well as lesson on breast self examination
OWWA Livelihood and Training Programs

Free training will be given on: Small Feedlot Cattle Farming.
Mar 9, (Saturday)
Venue: Philippine Overseas Labor Office, 18th floor, Mass  Mutual Tower, Wanchai
Resource Speaker: OFW entrepreneur Arnel Corpuz, former manager of biggest cattle feedlot in Australia
Pre registration required.

Lulong sa tong-its

Posted on No comments
Anim na taon sa amo si Marissa nang bigla siyang ma-terminate dahil napuno na ang amo sa pag-uwi niya ng madaling araw mula sa day-off, at kung minsan ay inaabot pa siya ng Lunes.

Aminado naman si Marissa na marami siyang naging pagkakamali sa trabaho at lagi siyang iniintindi ng amo at pinapaalalahan, kaya hindi niya akalain na masasagad din ito.



Maluwag pa naman sana siya sa trabaho dahil 11 at 13 taon na ang kanyang mga alaga at hindi na kailangan tutukan, bukod pa sa may driver sila na tagahatid-sundo sa eskuwela.

Ang naging problema ni Marisaa ay ang pagkalulong niya sa tong-its.

Tuwing walang pasok ay maghapon silang naglalaro ng mga kaibigan.

Hindi bababa ang taya sa $1,500 tuwing Linggo kaya kapag sunod-sunod ang talo niya ay nangungutang siya, hanggang mabaon na siya nang mabaon.



Nakatanggap man siya ng bayad para sa long service at isang buwang suweldo kapalit ng abiso ay hindi pa rin ito sapat na ipambayad sa kanyang mga utang.

Nakiusap siya ng husto sa amo at nangakong magbabago ngunit buo na ang desisyon nito.



Dahil nasa kolehiyo na ang mga anak ni Marissa ay kailangan niyang makakakuha muli ng trabaho bago matapos ang 14 araw na palugit niya.

Ang payo niya sa mga kapwa OFW, ingatan na huwag malulong sa bisyo dahil ang trabaho ang tiyak na masasakripisyo ng dahil dito. Huwag ding abusuhin ang kabaitan ng amo.

Si Marissa ay 48 taong gulang, may asawa at dalawang anak, at taga Bulacan. Dati siyang namamasukan sa Tai Wai. – Rodelia Villar














HK Immigration clamps down on absentee FDWs

Posted on 01 March 2019 No comments
Hong Kong airport.


By Daisy CL Mandap

Immigration authorities in Hong Kong have moved to stop the practice of some local employers of bringing their domestic workers with them when they go abroad, often for extended periods of time.

Recent reports indicate Filipino domestic workers who had returned to Hong Kong after being away for sometime have been warned against the practice by Immigration officers.

Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre welcomed the news, saying it bodes well for Filipino domestic workers who are often brought across the border with China by their Hong Kong employers.

“That’s  a good move by Immigration Department, because many employers with multiple residences are using the employment contract for Hong Kong as an excuse for bringing our nationals over when the actual intention is to make them work in China,” he said.

“It is risky for our domestic workers to be frequently brought across the border because they lose their legal protections and medical and welfare benefits when outside Hong Kong.”

However, those who have reported being questioned by Immigration are Filipino helpers who were brought to places other than China.

One, a Filipino driver hired by an American businessman married to a Filipina, said that on arrival in Hong Kong two weeks ago he was asked extensively why he had been in the Philippines for months. He was told he could not stay away from Hong Kong for more than six months in total each year.



“Sinabi ko na yun sa employer ko, na kailangan na kaming bumalik sa Hong Kong. Mas gusto ko naman diyan kasi ang hirap mag-drive sa Pilipinas dahil sa traffic,” he said.

He also confided that he was paid less than Hong Kong’s minimum allowable wage while in the Philippines, with the employer arguing that he was spending  much less while there.

“Babalik na lang ako sa Hong Kong at marami namang gustong magpirma sa akin dyan,” he said.



Another,  a Filipina domestic worker who travelled extensively with her employer in the United States and other Asian countries, was also warned when she applied to extend her contract in January, that she could not stay away for months on end.

Her employer was also made to sign an undertaking that she was not to take her maid out of Hong Kong for longer than a total of six months each year.

The Filipina helper, in contrast, was not happy about being stopped from accompanying her employer on her frequent travels abroad. She was at least paid her Hong Kong salary, and was allowed to venture out and explore the foreign places they visit.



It appears the new immigration policy does not apply to those crossing the border. A Filipina helper who is in China more often than in Hong Kong, says her employer was only made to sign an undertaking that she would only work at the residential address indicated in their declaration.

The helper returned to Hong Kong only last month. “Let’s see if I get warned when I return from China next month,” she said.

Eman Villanueva, chair of the Filipino Migrant Workers Union, said Immigration’s move was welcome. However the Hong Kong government must ensure that the foreign domestic workers are assured of adequate protection while away.



“In European countries like Swizerland, the labor laws are stricter so that all workers, whether local or foreign, must work for only a fixed period,” he said. Salaries are also far higher than in Hong Kong.

If the laws are to be followed strictly, he said migrant workers must be paid the salary stipulated by the country where they are taken, and allowed to enjoy the same rights given to workers there.

He said the plight of Filipina Lorain Asuncion, whose relatives were left without recourse after she died in the house of her employer’s father in Shenzhen, highlighted the need to ensure all migrant workers are well-protected, more so if they are made to work outside Hong Kong. 






DH tells court she “tapped” elderly ward with stool to stop him touching his feces

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Trial was held in Eastern Court

By Vir B. Lumicao

Was it a tap or a blow?

A Filipina accused of assaulting her bedridden elderly male ward has admitted using a pink plastic stool to hit his hand, but said it was just a “tap” to remind him not to touch his feces.

Ivy Rebustillo was again called to the witness on Mar 1 in Eastern Court, for the alleged twin assaults on the husband of her employer on Jun 30 last year. The alleged victim died late last year.



During her testimony, a CCTV footage taken in the living room of the employer’s North Point flat was played repeatedly in a bid to challenge the prosecution’s case that the recording showed her committing both common assault and indecent assault on her ward.

The part where Rebustillo had used a stool to “tap” on the hand of her ward, named only as “Mr X,” was replayed over and over as the helper was asked if that was intentional.



Each time the Filipina said “no”. She repeatedly said it was just a tap to stop her ward touching his feces.

When asked why she had to use the stool to hit the hand of her ward when she could have just used her hand, Rebustillo said it was what she was holding at the time.



But during cross-examination, the prosecutor took note of the force of the tapping. He said the knocking sound picked up by the CCTV from the impact formed the basis for the police charging her with common assault.

The prosecutor also said the seven seconds it took for the Filipina the pull the penis of the elderly man while changing his diaper was the basis for the indecent assault charge. He asked why the Filipina had to hold the sex organ that long if she was just inspecting her ward’s genital area while it was smeared with excrement.
  


The defense scored an initial victory when Magistrate Selma Masood agreed to exclude from the trial a video recorded interview by the police with Resbustillo, after her lawyer alleged investigators used threats and inducements to get her to admit the charges.

But Masood ruled that Rebustillo had a case to answer.

According to Rebustillo’s lawyer assigned by the Duty Lawyer Service, his client was repeatedly body-searched and handcuffed as she was transported between the two police stations in North Point and Wanchai for the interview.

The lawyer also said the police had told the Filipina that she could have a possible sentence of six months in jail reduced to just two months if she pleaded guilty to the charges.

At the start of her testimony, Rebustillo had claimed she did not fully understand a police notice about her rights which she was made to sign, because she was given a Tagalog interpreter instead of a Bicolano one as she had requested.

Her lawyer said it was wrong for the police to make her sign the declaration when she did not fully understand its contents.

Magistrate Masood set the final day of hearing on Mar. 7.










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