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Pulis?

Posted on 08 June 2019 No comments

Matagal na naming napapansin  ito, pero dahil walang pormal na reklamo, pilit naming ipinagwawalang-bahala. Pero dumating na ang hinihintay naming pagkakataon.
Ang tinutukoy namin ay walang iba kundi ang hindi patas na pagtrato ng mga pulis sa mga OFW.

Kamakailan ay nagkaroon kami ng pagkakataong maisulat ang tungkol dito nang batikusin ng isang hukom ang mga pulis sa isang kasong dinesisyunan niya.

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Binigyan kasi ni District Court Judge Stanley Chan ng parusang sampung buwan na pagkakakulong ang isang Pilipina pagkatapos aminin nito na siya ang nagsangla ng mga alahas ng amo ng kakilala niyang Indonesian.

Lumabas sa imbestigasyon na ang nagnakaw ay ang Indonesian. Kaya nagtaka ang hukom kung bakit inaresto ang Pilipina na nagsanla lamang, samantalang ang mismong nagnakaw ay hindi.

Ilan na bang malalaking kaso ang dumaan sa pulisya at hindi naresolba nang maayos?

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Natatandaan mo pa siguro ang mga kaso ng PEYA Travel, Emry’s Employment Agency, Natino at Limestone Employment?

Maraming OFW ang nabiktima, pero hanggang ngayon ay wala pa ring bunga ang imbestigasyon. Kaya ang panloloko ay paulit-ulit.

Kung may mga kasong inuupuan, mayroon ding mabilis umaksyon ang pulis laban sa OFW, lalo na kung ang nasa kabilang panig ng kaso ay kanilang amo.

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Halimbawa, nagkasagutan ang isang Pilipina at ang tumatayo niyang amo (iba kasi ang pumirma sa kontrata niya, na bawal). Nang hawakan siya nito sa braso, binalaan niya ang amo na tatawag siya ng pulis. Pero inunahan na siya nito.

Maya-maya pa ay dumating ang pulis, at umarteng may masakit na ulo ang amo at inaresto ang Pinay. Ikinulong ang Pinay nang 30 oras -- walang telepono, walang ligo, walang bihis.  Mabuti at hindi umamin si Pinay na siya ang nanakit, kung hindi ay nakulong pa siya sa salang hindi niya ginawa.

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Sa mga pangyayaring ito, ang payo ng mga abugado ay huwag magsalita hangga’t wala silang tagapagtanggol.

Minsan, ang pagtrato ng pulis sa kaso ay depende sa kung mas madali itong patunayan sa korte o hindi. Syempre, depende rin sa pulis: May matino at may hindi.
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I-TRY MO ITO, KATRIBO!
Mas madali nang tawagan ang mga advertiser natin dito. Pindutin lang ang kanilang ad at lalabas ang automatic dialer. Isa pang pindot ay matatawagan mo ang advertiser na hindi na kailangang i-dial ang numero nila. I-try mo!

Willing victims

Posted on No comments

By Daisy Catherine L. Mandap

It’s a tale as old as time, or a story told so often it has lost its punch.

This is all about how people succumb to promises of getting massive returns on their money through such illegal means as pyramiding that they ignore all the warning signs - until they lose even the shirt on their backs.

As wary observers say, they become “willing victims” of the illicit schemes.

Often, they know there is a risk that they could lose all their hard-earned money in the get-rich-quick schemes but they gamble away, anyway.

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A few unwitting ones do get hoodwinked into joining the more elaborate scams, but after being warned, choose to stay put, and even entice others to join in.

It’s easy to see why. The promised returns are high and the recruiters are so persistent and are not above sugar-coating their own earnings that many are easily hooked.

But once they enter the web of deceit, many find it difficult to get out. They realize that if they want to get the promised return they need to get more people to believe in the fallacy.

Such was the case of Emgoldex which collapsed spectacularly four years ago, bringing down with it hundreds, if not thousands of investors, along with their money.

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In Hong Kong alone, about 500 migrant workers lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in the scam, but never got close to getting anyone held responsible for their losses.

But Filipinos, including our migrant workers, never learn. Many continue to put money in shady investment deals on the mere say-so of a friend, or people they meet only on social media.

Worse, when warned by even the very government agency tasked to protect investors’ interest in the Philippines, they brush off the message, and accuse naysayers of spreading wrong information and ill-will.



Until the new pyramid of greed comes crashing down again.

We see the inevitable happening again in the case of Kapa Worldwide Ministry, which lost its license to operate on Apr 4. In an en banc ruling, the Securities and Exchange Commission ruled that Kapa had used its fake religious mantle to sell investments without a license.

The strongly-worded decision said the forfeiture of the license was done so Kapa “can no longer perpetrate its fraudulent and misleading acts through the privilege granted to it by the State.”

But the stern warning did not seem to deter those who are in the Kapa web, including many migrant workers in Hong Kong.

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When Labor Attache Jolly dela Torre posted a warning on his Facebook account many rushed to defend the group that purports to be a religious group but is such a sham that it does not even have a church or congregation, and does not involve itself in any religious activity.

The defense follows a well-used track: Why stop the little people from making a little money so they can improve their lives? Or, this group has already helped so many poor people, why do you want to throttle it?

For OFWs, the come-on can be found right on Kapa’s website that offers bare details of the group’s operations, but is replete with promised “blessings”. One only has to join the network for a year or so to reap enough financial rewards to go home for good.

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This brings to mind another trite saying: “If it’s too good to be true, then it is probably a scam.”

In Kapa’s case, the use of religion, plus the lack of attempt to use networking, or of rewarding people on a sliding scale as in a pyramid, smack of even greater greed and audacity.

This means, all the money that people put into the network went only to one person, and that is Kapa’s founder, Joel Apolinario, a self-proclaimed pastor, scientist and inventor. Kapa’s website does not even bother to cover this up, saying all the donations go to Apolinario as “donee.”

Any right-thinking investor would immediately scamper away on seeing this, but it seems people eager to get the promised 30% (or more) monthly “blessing” on their donation are more intent on looking the other way.

Many do not even flinch when confronted with Kapa’s blatant use of religion to fleece people of their money. It even seems like losing money through a “donation” has become more acceptable than losing it through gambling.

But what boggles the mind is why, of the three million Filipinos who have supposedly invested in Kapa, not one has come out lately to complain about not receiving the promised “blessing”? Why is Apolinario still free to woo investors, and even blast the SEC for revoking his license?

This could only be because there are people in high places who are heavily invested in Kapa. It is to their advantage that the network holds up long enough for them to take their money and run.

But again, as they say, what goes up must come down. Karma is real, especially for those who have the temerity to exploit people’s faith to make money.

So those who are with Kapa now should make sure they get out, fast. Or they would surely end up holding an empty bag, as did the many other willing victims before them.
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I-TRY MO ITO, KATRIBO!
Mas madali nang tawagan ang mga advertiser natin dito. Pindutin lang ang kanilang ad at lalabas ang automatic dialer. Isa pang pindot ay matatawagan mo ang advertiser na hindi na kailangang i-dial ang numero nila. I-try mo!












DH cleared of drug offense files labor claim vs employer

Posted on 06 June 2019 No comments
 High-grade cocaine seized from a group of Filipina tourists at the HK Airport

By Vir B. Lumicao

A Filipina domestic helper who was freed of a drug trafficking charge after being detained for nearly nine months is seeking compensation from her former employer for her allegedly unlawful dismissal.

Michelle Mardo went to the Labor Relations Division office in Tuen Mun this morning, Jun 6, to file the claim.

She alleged that her employer had terminated their contract without informing her, shortly after her arrest on Sept 27.
She is claiming, among several items, a month’s wage in lieu of notice, severance pay and an air ticket back to the Philippines.

She said she also plans to charge customs and police authorities for her wrongful arrest.

Mardo was arrested by undercover officers as soon as she accepted an air parcel sent from Ecuador by her Nigerian boyfriend whom she met online. The package was found to contain nearly 300 grams of pure-grade cocaine.

She was held without bail for nearly nine months but was released by the Eastern Court on Jun 4 after the prosecution withdrew the drug trafficking charge against her. No reason was given for the dropping of the charge.

“Malaking perhuwisyo ang ginawa nila sa akin at sa mga anak ko. Nag-suffer sila dahil doon,” Mardo, who has three children, said.
She said her two teenage children had to drop out of school because she could no longer send them money after her arrest.

The Immigration Department gave Mardo until this Saturday to remain in Hong Kong, but she is applying for a visa extension to pursue the labor case against her employer.



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  I-TRY MO ITO, KATRIBO!
Mas madali nang tawagan ang mga advertiser natin dito. Pindutin lang ang kanilang ad at lalabas ang automatic dialer. Isa pang pindot ay matatawagan mo ang advertiser na hindi na kailangang i-dial ang numero nila. I-try mo!



Pinay faces theft charge, says she ‘forgot’ to pay for grocery items

Posted on No comments
Defendant told she must have a lawyer in court

By Vir B. Lumicao

A Filipina domestic worker who says she forgot to pay for some grocery items she had placed in the lower part of a shopping cart appeared in Kwun Tong court today, Jun 6, to face a charge of theft.

M. Alog was supposed to enter her plea before Magistrate May Chung but her case was adjourned because she was not represented by a lawyer.
When the magistrate asked Alog why she had no lawyer, she said she had no money to pay for one.

Chung adjourned the hearing so the Filipina could go to the Duty Lawyer Scheme to get herself a counselor, but she returned half an hour later, saying no one was available to take up her case.
Alog is out on bail and has been staying in a boarding house since the termination of her work contract by her employer in Yau Tong following her arrest on Apr 18.

She said outside court that she had not intended to steal. She said she had gone to a Wellcome supermarket in Yau Tong to buy some groceries, but forgot to pay for the goods worth $129 that she had placed in a basket on the cart’s bottom rack.
She was intercepted outside the store by a guard and turned over to the police.



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  I-TRY MO ITO, KATRIBO!
Mas madali nang tawagan ang mga advertiser natin dito. Pindutin lang ang kanilang ad at lalabas ang automatic dialer. Isa pang pindot ay matatawagan mo ang advertiser na hindi na kailangang i-dial ang numero nila. I-try mo!



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