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DH jailed 4 months for using invalid contract to get $35k loan

Posted on 26 August 2019 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

A Filipina former helper was jailed for four months by a Kowloon Court magistrate on Aug 26 after she admitted using a terminated work contract to secure a loan of $35,700 from Prime Credit in Hong Kong, then left for the Philippines.

Magistrate rejected plea for clemency,
pointing out to Buena Cosa's use of  fraud
Ranie Lou Buena Cosa, 31, was arrested at Hong Kong International Airport on Jul 26 when she arrived as a tourist to visit a sister who is working here.

She did not know that she was on Immigration’s wanted list for having fled Hong Kong after taking out the loan.
In court, she pleaded guilty to a charge of “obtaining pecuniary advantage by deception.”

Magistrate Ada Yim rejected her lawyer’s plea for leniency, saying the offense was serious because Buena Cosa had fraudulently used an invalid contract, then fled after collecting the loan.
Buena Cosa was found to have taken out the loan from Prime Credit’s branch in Carnarvon Plaza, Tsimshatsui, on Apr 23 this year, 10 days after she was terminated by her employer.

Her counsel said Buena Cosa came to work as a domestic helper in Hong Kong on Mar 23, 2018 but was fired more than a year later, on Apr 13 this year.
After failing to find a new employer and needing money badly, she went to the financing company to take out a loan using her contract.

The lawyer appealed for leniency, saying the defendant was remorseful and admitted the crime at the first instance.

Buena Cosa had been in police custody since her arrest.


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Cancer suspected in case of Filipina found dead in bed

Posted on 25 August 2019 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

A third Filipino domestic worker is reported to have died within this month, apparently of cancer.

Mylin Delizo, 48, from San Jose City, Nueva Ecija, was found dead by her employer in Lai Chi Kok in the morning of Aug 19, according to the deceased’s nephew Jonathan.

Image may contain: 1 person, smiling
Delizo during happier (and healthier) days
“Kutob lang po ng amo niya (na cancer ang ikinamatay) kasi biglaan daw po ang pagpayat ng Tita ko, medyo naglagas daw po kasi ang buhok niya,” said the nephew, who had been in touch by phone with the employer.

It was not immediately clear if she had been diagnosed of having cancer, and if she did, if she received treatment for the disease.

The coroner’s report on the cause of death is still being awaited by Delizo’s family.
She was the third Filipina domestic worker to have died in Hong Kong within 10 days this month.

On Aug 12, Milagrosa M. Aligaen, 63, who had worked in Hong Kong for 29 years, was found dead on her bed in her employer’s house in Shaukeiwan, apparently due to heatstroke.

On Aug 22, Imelda Bartolome, 50, who worked in Mei Foo, died in hospital of a heart attack. She came from Naguilian, Isabela.
Delizo, who worked for a family on Lai Chi Kok Road, Kowloon, came to Hong Kong in 1998 and had been supporting her mother, said her nephew. She was married but had no children.

Her family learned only about her death when Hong Kong police used her cellphone to call the last telephone number that she had dialed. It turned out to belong to Jonathan's younger sister who lives in Singapore.

Jonathan said that on hearing the tragic news, he went to the Department of Foreign Affairs regional office in San Fernando, Pampanga, to report the death and file a claim for his aunt’s remains. The DFA relayed the request to the Consulate in Hong Kong.
On hearing of her daughter’s death, Delizo’s 79-year-old mother has reportedly been crying frequently.

“Nadudurog ang puso ko na makitang umiiyak si Lola dahil gustong-gusto nang maiuwi rito ang bangkay ni Tita,” the nephew said.

Delizo’s family is working with her employer to get her remains sent home as soon as possible.
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DH expelled by employer at dawn settles claim for $1,770

Posted on 23 August 2019 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

A Filipina helper who was driven out by her employer in the wee hours just 12 days since starting work, has agreed to settle her claims against the latter for $1,770, a tiny fraction of what she had originally asked for.

Aiza Bico said after agreeing to settle the case at the Labour Tribunal on Aug 23 that she just wanted “to end my torment once and for all.”

Bico tried, but failed, to convince the tribunal to order teh employer to refund her agency fees

Bico had originally asked for $14,031 from her employer Veronica Lau Wai-yi for unpaid wages, a month’s salary in lieu of notice, traveling allowance, one-way air ticket and refund for the agency fees that she paid in Manila.
But presiding officer David Chum only allowed the payment of the helper’s wages and other entitlements under the contract, minus the salary in lieu and agency fees which Bico had calculated at $7.615.38 (Php49,500).

“Why do you ask your employer to reimburse you when she had already paid the agency in Hong Kong for all these? You ask the agency for the refund, maybe it did not remit the money,” the officer said. He warned Bico she would lose in a trial.

But Chum also disregarded Lau’s attempt to deduct $279.20 from Bico’s pay for the two days that she allegedly took a day off.  Chum warned Lau she risked breaking the law for not paying for those two days.
The officer said that as each party was claiming a month’s salary of $4,520 in lieu of notice, they must go to trial if they insist on this claim. They will have to give proof as to who ended the contract, and wait for six to eight months.

But if they wanted to settle the case on the same day, they could do so in 15 minutes.
 
The officer called for a break in the hearing, and at the resumption after lunch, both Bico and Lau accepted the $1,770 proposed by Chum.
In her claim, Bico said Lau had forced her to sign a draft letter stating that she was leaving because she was unable to do her work properly. Bico said she gave the resignation letter at 10:35pm on Jul 3, stating she would leave on Aug 3.

But while she was asleep at 12:30 am on Jul 4, she was woken up by Lau, who ordered her to leave immediately. She said she begged to go in the morning but Lau called the agency. Lau then let her talk to a staff who told her, “Pack your things and go.”

The Filipina said she had to walk from the employer’s house in Ngau Tau Kok to the MTR station in Kowloon Bay at 1:45am, unaware that the station was already closed.

She then called 999 and, when police came, she asked if they could persuade Lau to let her stay in her flat until the morning. They however, said, they could do nothing if she refused.

She said she then begged the officers to take her to her agency, Grandview Employment Agency in Hung Hom, but they told her it was not part of their duty. 

As it was raining, she stayed under a footbridge, then went to a park and sat where there was a CCTV camera for her security.

At 6am, she went to the MTR and traveled to Whampoa where she stayed in the agency’s boarding house, spending her own money for her food. She sought help from the Consulate and the Mission for Migrant Workers, which put her up in its Jordan Road shelter.

In a conciliation meeting on Jul 15 at the Labour Relations Division in Kwun Tong, Lau wanted to give Bico just an air ticket to Cauayan, Isabela, saying it was very costly.

Bico, a mother of two from Roxas town, told The SUN this was her first work abroad, for which she paid A&W International in Manila PhP60,000 borrowed from her sister. The agency reportedly told her this was for her medical examination and video and training fees.

She plans to go the Philippine Overseas Labor Office to ask for a refund of the money she paid the agency, and if possible, have her employer put on the blacklist.
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Gabriela HK joins outcry against release of Filipino murderer and rapist

Posted on No comments

By The SUN

Women’s rights group Gabriela Hong Kong has joined the uproar over the planned release from jail of former mayor Antonio Sanchez who was sentenced to seven life sentences in 1995 for the gruesome murder and rape of a young student and the killing of her boyfriend.

The group urged the public to block Sanchez’s release, saying he remains a danger to society, especially to women.
 
Prison officials say Sanchez (in orange) is still in prison (Inquirer photo)
Sanchez, who was mayor of Calauan, Laguna when he raped Eileen Sarmenta and had her killed along with her boyfriend Alan Gomez in 1993, was reportedly about to be released for supposed good conduct while in jail.

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This is said to be in line with Republic Act No. 10592, which increased the good conduct time allowance (GCTA) accorded to inmates.

But Gabriela HK asked, “Did money talk in this case?”
The group pointed out that RA 10592 excludes criminals convicted of “heinous crimes” so Sanchez should not benefit from it.

It also decried that under President Duterte’s rule, high-profile criminals like Sanchez, Imelda Marcos, Bong Revilla, Juan Ponce Enrile and Jinggoy Estrada were either released or exonerated while human rights activists and government critics are either harassed or locked up on trumped-up charges.
“We cannot allow this travesty of justice to happen,” said Gabriela HK. “What kind of justice do we have where the innocents are jailed and killed but the guilty get away with heinous crimes?”

Sanchez during his trial in 1995
The group pointed out that while in prison, Sanchez continued his criminal acts. He was found with a kilo of shabu or ice worth P1.5 million inside a statue of the Virgin Mary in his jail cell in 2010. Five years later, he was found to have kept illegal appliances in his cell, like an air conditioning unit and a flat-screen TV.

These, after his trial exposed that Sanchez had caused his henchmen to abduct Sarmenta, then raped her. Not content with this, Sanchez turned over the young girl to his bodyguards, who proceeded to gang-rape, then kill her. Gomez was tortured by the group before being killed, and his body left by the roadside.

After a 16-month trial, Sanchez was given seven life sentences, making a total of 360 years. Recent news reports say Sanchez was convicted of two other murder charges afterwards, making his sentence a total of nine life imprisonments.

Gabriela HK said prison authorities should not be allowed to violate the law by releasing Sanchez.
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