Responsive Ad Slot

Latest

Sponsored

Features

Buhay Pinay

People

Sports

Business Ideas for OFWs

Join us at Facebook!

High Court judge scolds man acquitted of raping Chinese-Filipina woman

Posted on 25 September 2019 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao
The judge showed her displeasure at the acquittal by giving the defendant a tongue-lashing

He may have been acquitted of a rape charge at the High Court, but a 34-year-old Japanese businessman did not escape a tongue-lashing from the judge who heard the case and was visibly disappointed by the jury’s verdict.

“You are acquitted, but I have to tell you the conduct that you displayed is unacceptable,” Judge Remedios D’Almada told defendant Kaise Hiroki in disgust at the end of the trial on Sept 24. “I can say you are very fortunate now.”

Hiroki was acquitted by a jury made up of five men and two women of a charge of raping a Chinese-Filipina restaurant worker in Mong Kok in August last year. The jury deliberated for three hours before deciding on a “not guilty” verdict by a vote of 6-1.

Call us!

They disregarded the prosecution claim that the woman, described by the judge as having come from the Philippines and was partly educated there and in Hong Kong, was unconscious due to drunkenness when the alleged rape took place.

In his defense, Hiroki admitted in court that he had sex with the 24-year-old woman referred to in court as “Miss X”, but it was consensual.

The incident happened in Hiroki’s home after he and Miss X rode on a minibus from Central to Mong Kok in the wee hours of Aug 5, 2018.
Judge D’Almada noted that the defendant took a complete stranger to his home when he knew she was very drunk and not totally in control of herself. But instead of allowing her to rest before taking her home, he had sexual intercourse with her.

“It is my advice to you not to engage in sex with a complete stranger,” D’Almada said, adding that, “obviously, people who get on a minibus to do not expect to be taken to a stranger’s house. No doubt they will be freaking out.”

She said Hiroki should have asked the police, the building guard or the driver for help.
“X,” giving evidence at the start of the trial on Sept 16, said she had drunk more than she could take between 11pm and 2am as she celebrated her birthday with friends. She was very drunk, dizzy, and “paralyzed” when she boarded the minibus in Central.

She said that when she got off the minibus terminus in Mong Kok, she was unaware of her surroundings and had blacked out. When she regained consciousness, she found herself naked in bed in a dim room. Despite her weakness, she got into her panties and shorts.

In his testimony, Hiroki said the woman sat beside him next to the window on the minibus from Central and was asleep the whole journey, sometimes leaning on him.



So he supported her with his arm around her shoulder and she took his hand and put it on her lap. In the last five to 10 minutes of the trip, she laid her head on his lap, he said.

In Mong Kok, “X” was too weak to get off the minibus but was half-conscious so he asked if she would like to rest in his flat on Nathan Road about 150 meters away. The woman reportedly replied “Unnng.”

He supported her with his arm for some distance but, as she was heavy, he carried her on his back and took her home. He then laid her on his bed, undressed her and wiped her whole body with wet towel.

They then kissed and hugged before having sex, he said.

Hiroki’s counsel, Oliver Davies, disputed “X’s” claim that she was unconscious. He cited a CCTV footage of the pair arriving in Hiroki’s apartment block that showed she was on her feet when they entered the lift.

However, the cameras also showed the woman looking very weak and unable to walk after her brief stay in Hiroki’s flat, so that the defendant had to carry her to a taxi.

The jury reviewed the CCTV footage and pictures of the pair’s arrival and exit from the block, in addition to hundreds of pages of police statements and transcripts of video recorded interviews of Hiroki.
---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.

PCG to work with CARD HK in giving fin-lit to OFWs

Posted on 24 September 2019 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap
Image may contain: 15 people, including Emelia Dellosa, Fidelita Lagud Galia, Leo A. Deocadiz, Marites Palma, Victoria Reyes Munar, Edna LolaAktibista Aquino and Venus Alunday, people smiling, people sitting
Congen Raly Tejada with Card HK's officers and trainors


Consul General Raly Tejada has given the go-ahead for the Philippine Consulate to serve as the venue for the free financial literacy seminars given to Filipino domestic workers by Card HK Foundation.

His assurance came as Card HK held its first financial education seminar at the Consulate on Sept 22, with 47 Filipino household workers taking part.

Before the start of the seminar, Congen Tejada met with a delegation from Card HK who briefed him on what the foundation has been doing to help migrants plan for their future and avoid the debt trap, the biggest bane of Filipinos who go abroad to work.
Tejada acknowledged the big problem faced by the community in weaning Filipino workers away from high-risk loans, and enthusiastically agreed to provide the venue for Card’s future fin-lit seminars.

The group from Card HK was made up of founder Edna Aquino, Board member Leo Deocadiz, lead trainor Victoria Munar, trainor Marites Palma and Card, Inc. area manager Jireh Duhina, who came to observe the training process.

Aquino said more than 3,000 OFWs in Hong Kong have undergone Card HK’s fin-lit training since it began nine years ago.
What’s unique about the program, she said, is that migrant workers who had undergone the training are now conducting it themselves, like Munar and Palma. This is in line with Card HK’s advocacy of empowering migrants not only through emancipating them from money-related problems, but also in allowing them to help others.
Image may contain: one or more people and people sitting
CG Tejada addressed the fin-lit participants

Aside from the fin-lit program, Card HK also conducts entrepreneurship and livelihood trainings for OFWs.

Deocadiz noted Card HK’s tie-up with its mother organization, the Ramon Magsaysay Award-winning micro enterprise Card MRI in the Philippines, in providing a follow-mechanism for the families of OFWs who have undergone training.
He said that an exposure trip to the community work done by Card MRI, especially with family members of Hong Kong-based OFWs, was what convinced him to join the foundation.

Aquino cited Munar as an example of those who have been helped, saying her two daughters had been recruited to work with Card in the Philippines.

Duhina, who has been following up on HK-based trainees, said that of the 3,040 OFWs who have joined the fin-lit program, Card MRI has managed to visit the families of 2,248.

Of these, 1,1621 families have joined Card’s programs, which include savings, loans for business, health care and insurance.

Image may contain: 27 people, including Leo A. Deocadiz and Victoria Reyes Munar, people smiling
CG Tejada with Card officers pose with participants

Card HK Foundation was founded by Card MRI in April 2010, on the belief that through its educational and training programs, Filipinos in Hong Kong can be helped in building their capacities toward financial literacy and entrepreneurship.

Its website adds: “The goal is to support them in realizing their aspirations to have a better future for themselves and their families back home, and to eventually promote harmony between Filipino employees and their employers here in Hong Kong, thereby ultimately benefiting the entire city.”

Those interested to join Card HK’s future trainings can visit its Facebook page, Card Hong Kong  Foundation, to sign up and get more information.
---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.

Tribunal rejects claim for compensation by DH who testified via video link

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

The landmark Tribunal hearing was held in a technology courtroom in West Kowloon court

A former domestic helper who won a landmark approval to testify via video link from the Philippines failed in her bid to sue her employer for compensation of around $85,000 after the labor tribunal found that she was sacked for cause.

Presiding Officer W.Y. Ho, sitting as a trial judge, said in her judgment on Sept 23 that she was convinced that Joenalyn Mallorca was sacked for sexually abusing her employer’s daughter who was only seven years old at the time.

Ho gave her verdict after a three-day trial last week in which both Mallorca and her former employer, Mrs Ng, gave evidence via video link in West Kowloon Court, outfitted as a technology court.
The employer had accused Mallorca of inserting her finger in the genitals of her daughter on at least two occasions while washing the girl, causing injury and inflammation. Ng also accused Mallorca of adding a substance to the shampoo that irritated the girl’s scalp.

Ho said she believed Ng’s claim that the girl’s pubic area was inflamed and that she had a painful urination due to the maid’s acts and was consistent with the girl’s complaints.

This was the reason for Mallorca’s summary dismissal, the judge ruled.
The judge also said the matter involving child abuse and neglect was outside of the labor issues at hand but she planned to refer the matter to relevant authorities, suggesting a police investigation.

Mallorca had sought compensation after Ng terminated her work contract on Sept 22, 2016, just three months after she started working for the family. The helper alleged the employer had slapped and then dismissed her for no reason.

Mallorca initially filed only a claim for unpaid wages, a month’s salary in lieu of notice and return air fare against Ng at the Tribunal. Ng, who agreed to pay her arrears in wages totaling $1,824.37 and plane fare of $1,300.
The Filipina returned home in December 2016 to look after her mother, who was sick of lung cancer, and her two children without settling four other items totaling $8,707.33, including wages in lieu.

She apparently added a claim for compensation when her case went up for trial. According to Shiella Estrada, president of a labor union who was allowed to represent Mallorca in court, the total claim was around $85,000.

A second hearing was set for Feb 2, 2017, but Mallorca could not return because no one would take care of her mother, so, she authorized the NGO, Help for Helpers, to represent her.

Mallorca applied to give evidence via video link but Tribunal Presiding Officer David Chum dismissed her application on Mar 30, 2017, and struck off her claims against Ng without a trial.

With help from another NGO, Justice Without Borders, solicitors firm Dechert took Mallorca’s case to the High Court, which reversed Chum’s ruling and ordered the use of video link. High Court Justice Bebe Pui Ying Chu also ordered the Tribunal to restore Mallorca’s claims.

The maid was later allowed by the Tribunal to be represented in the trial by Estrada.

In Monday’s verdict, Judge Ho struck out Mallorca’s claim for one month’s wage in lieu of notice, a $300 claim for taxi fare from the Ninoy Aquino International Airport to her home in Laguna, and the rest of her claims, without stating their amount.

In all, Ho awarded only a total of $970 as Ng’s compensation to Mallorca. No order was made as to cost, as Ng did not apply for it.

The High Court’s decision to allow Mallorca to give evidence via video-conferencing was seen as setting a precedent for other migrant workers who have returned home to pursue cases against their former employers in Hong Kong.

While testimony via video link is used at the District Court and the High Court, Mallorca’s case was the first ever to be allowed in the Labour Tribunal.
---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.


HK groups mark martial law anniversary with call to oust Duterte

Posted on 22 September 2019 No comments
by The SUN
 
The statement likens Duterte to Marcos but with far more powers

Filipino community groups and individuals led by church leaders marked the 47th anniversary of the declaration of martial law in the Philippines on Sept 21 with a call for the ouster of President Rodrigo Duterte.

The first united group to call for the president’s removal from office said that like Marcos, Duterte’s tyrannical rule “has wrought irreparable damage to our country and its democratic institutions.”

The statement accused Duterte of destroying the check and balance in government by dominating Congress, imprisoning a senator to sow terror, and causing the former Chief Justice to be removed on flimsy ground.

Call us!

Duterte is also said to have abetted the extrajudicial killings not just of suspected drug addicts and pushers, but also of human rights activists. Church leaders, on the other hand, have been publicly shamed by the president, along with their faith.

The government’s alleged corruption was another issue raised in the statement, which cited as an example the Php100 million “pork barrel” allocated for each member of Congress, along with the Php4.5billion set aside for the president as intelligence fund.
Duterte was also accused of being a “traitor” for not asserting the country’s right over the West Philippine Sea, despite winning an arbitral court ruling against China over the disputed shoals.

“And all along, ordinary Filipinos have been left to grapple with rising food prices, horrendous traffic, lack of jobs and job security, unmitigated killings, and a general sense of hopelessness and despair,” said the statement.
The group also hit out at the government for failing to protect OFWs against unscrupulous recruiters and discriminatory laws in their host countries, and subjecting them to more mandatory fees, such as for SSS and insurance.

“All these are happening, while the country’s officials who could make a difference look the other way, or continue paying homage to Duterte. This is martial law without the official pronouncement, but has proved far more damaging to our country, its institutions and its people,” said the statement.

The joint statement issued by Bayan Hong Kong and Macau was supported by several church leaders, including the Chaplain for Filipinos Fr Jay Flandez, and the Philippine Independent Church head, Fr. Dwight dela Torre. Pastors from the Intenational Methodist Church and the United Church of Christ in the Philippines also signed.

Signing in their individual capacity were several Filipino professionals and migrant rights advocates.

Apart from Bayan, the group signatories included three other alliances: United Filipinos in Hong Kong, Gabriela Hong Kong and Filipino Migrant Workers Association, as well as 28 smaller organizations.

The full statement is printed below:

HK JOINT STATEMENT AGAINST MARTIAL LAW AND TYRANNY

Marcos declared martial law on Sept 23, 1972, two days after he signed the infamous proclamation 1081


No to Martial Law! Oust Duterte now!

Today marks the 47th year since former dictator Ferdinand Marcos imposed martial law throughout the Philippines.

We, concerned Filipinos in Hong Kong, are alarmed that long after we regained our freedoms with the ouster of Marcos, another dictator with far more powers has emerged, and has wrought irreparable damage to our country and its democratic institutions.

Since President Rodrigo Duterte took power in June 2016, he has systematically destroyed all checks and balances in the country.

He took control of Congress by ensuring his party had a super-majority among its members, then had a senator long critical of his human rights record arrested and detained on flimsy ground, striking fear in the hearts of most of her colleagues.

Next, with help from corrupt justices in the Supreme Court, he had the Chief Justice removed on the lame excuse that she missed filing some of her statements of assets, liabilities and net worth, and replaced her in quick succession, with people totally beholden to him.

Duterte has also neutralized the military and the police by giving top perks to officers in the form of juicy posts in government and fat salaries.

In the meantime, the extrajudicial killings committed in the name of his fake campaign against drugs continue to mount, with official figures showing no less than 30,000 deaths occurring since he took over.

Human rights advocates critical of his government including journalists, lawyers, farmers and church people, have also become targets of political attacks and killings. There are now 266 victims of extra judicial killings among them, and more than 400, of frustrated killings.

Many of these human rights defenders are being tagged as terrorists and put under surveillance or on a watch list, before being arrested on trumped-up charges. Church people, on the other hand, are often publicly vilified by Duterte who calls them repugnant names, and heaps scorn on their faith and God.

Corruption has also gotten much worse than before, with his key allies in several branches of government – correctional services, tourism, public works, labor, just to name a few – being allowed to get away with pilfering tens of millions of public funds.

Pork barrel, long a source of corruption among lawmakers, is not only back, but has been increased to as much as Php100 million per congressman, virtually ensuring their total complicity and obedience to Duterte’s government.

Duterte himself stands to get a total of Php4.5 billion in security and intelligence funds, an amount that is not subject to scrutiny by any government entity, including the Commission on Audit.

But this is just the icing on his cake, as Duterte continues to be linked to highly anomalous transactions, mostly by way of suspicious loan agreements with his benefactors in China.

Let us also not forget the Php6.4billion worth of smuggled drugs traced to his eldest son, Paolo, and the hundreds of millions of pesos he was shown to have deposited into a bank account during his campaign for the presidency.

His abject obedience to China has also led him to commit the traitorous act of giving up our hard-won victory in claiming the West Philippine Sea.

And all along, ordinary Filipinos have been left to grapple with rising food prices, horrendous traffic, lack of jobs and job security, unmitigated killings, and a general sense of hopelessness and despair.

Worse off are the millions of Filipinos forced to work overseas to help make ends meet for their families. Not content with leaving them unprotected against greedy recruiters and discriminatory laws in their host countries, our OFWs are being subjected to more state exactions, including mandatory SSS contributions and insurance.

All these are happening, while the country’s officials who could make a difference look the other way, or continue paying homage to Duterte. This is martial law without the official pronouncement, but has proved far more damaging to our country, its institutions and its people.

As we mark yet another anniversary of that grim event in our history when Marcos declared martial law in our country, we call on everyone to stop Duterte from dragging us back to those dark days of fear and despair.

Let us all join hands in ending his murderous and corrupt regime.

Oust Duterte now!


Signed:
ORGANIZATIONS
1.    Abra Migrant Workers Welfare Association
2.    Association of Concerned Filipinos
3.    Cuyapo OFW Association Hong Kong
4.    Filipino Friends in Hong Kong
5.    Filipino Lesbians Organization
6.    Filipino Migrant Domestic Worke
7.    Filipino Migrants Association (FMA)
8.    Filipino Women Migrant Aol
9.    Friends of Bethune House
10.  Gabriela Hong Kong Bank
11.  Likha Filipino Migrants Cultural Organization
12.  Luzviminda Migrante
13.  Migrante NaguilianMigrante Pier
14.  Migrante Shatin
15.  Migrante Tamar
16.  Migrante Tsing Yi
17.  Migrante Tsuen Wan
18.  Migrante Yuen Long
19.  Migranteng Artista ng Bayan
20.  Mission Volunteers (MOVERS)
21.  Organic Cultural and Environmental Organization
22.  Philippine Independent Church Choir
23.  Pinatud A Saleng Ti Umili
24.  Pangasinan Organization for Welfare, Empowerment and Rights POWER
25.  Promotion of Church People’s Response - Hong Kong (PCPR-HK)
26.  Samahang Migrante
27.  Sta Maria Migrants Association
28.  Women of Philippine Independent Church- WOPIC Antique

ALLIANCES
1. BAYAN Hong Kong & Macau
2. Gabriela Hong Kong
3. Filipino Migrant Workers’ Union
4. United Filipinos in Hong Kong (UNIFIL-MIGRANTE-HK)

INDIVIDUALS
1. Fr. Jay Flandez, Chaplain to Filipino Catholics, Hong Kong
2. Rev. Ray Sison, Methodist International Church
3. Ms. Daphne Ceniza-Kuok, Human rights advocate
4. Atty. Daisy CL Mandap, Journalist/migrant rights advocate
5. Mr. Leo Deocadiz, Journalist/Publisher
6. Fr. Dwight Dela Torre, Iglesia Filipina Independiente
7. Rev. Joram Calimutan, UCCP HK
8. Pastora Betty Perido, UCCP HK
9. Mr. Aaron Ceradoy, Asia Pacific Mission for Migrants (APMM)
10. Mr. Gilbert Legaspi, Resident
10. Mr. Chris Tomale, Customer Service Representative
12. Ms. Glady B. Ayo, Samahang Magdalo International
13. Fine Faderog Cariaga, OFW
---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.

Don't Miss