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HK Filcom groups unite vs. new mandatory fees for OFWs

Posted on 27 October 2019 No comments
Logo of the new coalition which is made up of some of the biggest Filcom groups in Hong Kong

By The SUN

Leaders of 15 Filipino migrant organizations in Hong Kong have formed a coalition and are seeking a meeting with Consul General Raly Tejada to discuss their opposition to what they call “excessive government fees” imposed on them.

In a solidarity meeting on Sunday, Oct 27, at Statue Square in Central, the leaders who set up Rise Against Government Exaction (Rage) Hong Kong said the Duterte government burdens OFWs with mandatory fees but does not give them sufficient services in return.

The leaders said they have sent a letter requesting a meeting with Congen Tejada on Nov 10 to voice out their opposition to the forced memberships and fees but are still awaiting his reply. They will also present a petition with 30,000 signatures to the head of post.
Filcom leaders sign on the Rage banner to show their unity against the govt exactions
A protest rally against the mandatory memberships is also being planned ahead of the celebration of International Migrants Day on Dec 15.

The meeting was held in reaction to the government’s recent announcement requiring PhilHealth membership for all OFWs at 50% more than current rate starting January next year. The current annual premium of Php2,400 per year will go up to Php3,600 next year, until it reaches Php6,000 by 2022.
“We have always been exhausted with our long working hours, inhuman accommodation and low wages, and now we are being made to pay for more fees, as if we are made of money,” United Filipinos in Hong Kong chairperson Dolores Balladares-Pelaez said.

Pelaez, addressing the meeting, said the workers should not meekly accept all the fee increases that the government in Manila forcibly imposes on migrant workers.
Unifil chair Dolores Balladares-Pelaez recounts all the new fees OFWs are being made to pay
She recalled that last year, the government passed a resolution requiring all OFWs to be insured in the Philippines even if their employers are already required to have them insured in their work destinations.

This was followed by the implementation of mandatory membership of all OFWs in the Social Security System, whether already deployed abroad or about to leave the country.



More recently, she said, membership in Pag-IBIG, the state housing fund scheme, was also made mandatory, meaning no OFW can secure an overseas employment certificate or OEC unless they have paid for all the required fees.

“Sa usaping ito ng mandatory membership, ang paninindigan po natin ay hindi natin pinipigilan ang isang migrante kung nagnanais siyang mag-member ng SSS, ng Pag-IBIG, ng PhilHealth o anumang insurance,” Pelaez said.

But she said forcing OFWs to pay for membership in all these government agencies is a different matter altogether.

She said that aside from opposing mandatory memberships in various government schemes, the coalition is also against the excessive increases in premium fees, such as the more than 50% hike in SSS and PhilHealth memberships.

These fees combined are far more than the meager wage rise that the Hong Kong government has granted to Filipino migrant workers for the past years, and eat into their already meager budget for their family's needs.

Other leaders who spoke against the mandatory memberships and excessive fees were Marites Nuval of Global Alliance and Alann Mas of Abante Cagayanos, who are also spokespersons of Rage.


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Filipina asylum-seeker jailed nearly 8 years for drug trafficking

Posted on No comments
by Vir B. Lumicao

The former helper was sentenced on Oct 25 in the High Court. 
A 37-year-old Filipina former domestic helper has been ordered locked up for seven years and eight months by a High Court judge after pleading guilty to a charge of trafficking in dangerous drugs.

Josephine Felizardo showed no emotion as Judge Poon Siu-tung read out his sentence on her on Friday, Oct. 25.

Felizardo a mother of four who was on recognizance, appeared in court with Charlotte Marie Borrill, a British-Indonesian woman aged 20, on related charges.
Felizardo was charged with drug trafficking following her arrest in a police search on a residential unit at 119 Shanghai St in Yaumatei on Apr 28 last year.

Borrill, as the registered occupant of the flat, was also arrested and charged for allowing the premises to be used for drug trafficking.

Both pleaded guilty to the charges on separate occasions, but their cases were consolidated when they were transferred to the High Court, the prosecutor said.

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Felizardo was arrested at about noon on Apr 28 last year when police armed with a search warrant entered the flat and saw her sit on a bed and put her right hand on a bag which was found to contain 23.09 grams of “ice”, 27.9g of cocaine and 18g of ketamine.

Some 23 grams of "ice" similar to this heap was seized from Felizardo.
The police also found two bottles with traces of drugs and $80,400 cash in a handbag belonging to Felizardo.

Felizardo told the officers Borrill owned the flat and she was just there for the night. She said she did not know two other people seen visiting the unit before the raid.



Borrill told the police her father owned the flat and that he let her stay there for the three months before the raid. She said she knew the two bottles had traces of drugs but that she was not aware narcotics were being trafficked in the unit.

The prosecution said Felizardo was convicted in December 2015 for breach of condition of stay for which she was sentenced to a six-week jail term suspended for three years. She later applied for recognizance.

Her trafficking offense took place while she was on suspended sentence.                                                
In mitigation, the defense lawyer said Felizardo came here to work as a domestic helper in 2014 but was terminated in 2015. She overstayed, was arrested and convicted. She has a husband in the Philippines and four children who are all studying.

Judge Poon gave Felizardo a discount for her guilty plea, and ordered that her six-week sentence for breach of condition to be served concurrently with that for drug trafficking.

At the recommendation of Borrill’s lawyer Kamlesh Sadhawni, the judge postponed the sentencing of Borrill until Nov 1 pending her sentencing on a separate charge of drug possession.


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Manila syndicate behind UK visa scam in HK, court told

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


The 2 Filipinas will testify in District Court vs the HK woman accused of working for the visa scam gang

Two Filipinas who have admitted conspiring to use fake documents to apply for a British work visa will testify at the trial of a woman who is allegedly the local connection of the Manila-based syndicate behind the scam.

This is according to prosecutors who said the woman, identified only as Ms Chan,
will be tried in District Court around mid-January.
Due to this development, the sentencing of Criselda Bantasan, 31, and Cristy Par, 47, who both have pleaded guilty to the conspiracy charge, was delayed until Mar 3 next year. They were supposed to be sentenced on Oct 24.

The prosecutor told Judge Li Chi-ho that Bantasan and Par provided information that led to the arrest of Chan, who ran an agency in Hong Kong recruiting applicants for purported jobs abroad.
In November last year, Bantasan and Par identified Chan in a video of the alleged Hong Kong link of the Manila syndicate that was behind the visa scam.

Chan was charged in Eastern Court after her arrest. Her case was moved to the District Court this year.



Solicitor Melville Boase, who represented the two Filipinas, told the court in an earlier hearing about the Manila-based syndicate that offers Filipinos here spurious jobs in Britain and supplies them with fake documents to support their applications.

Boase said Bantasan was a victim who had been helping police since day one to identify the syndicate members who conned her.

Judge Li extended the bail of Bantasan and Par until their next hearing on Mar 3. He
also granted Bantasan’s request to change her reporting from the Kwun Tong Police to the Western Police Station in Sai Ying Pun.


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Trial of Pinoy in US$100B fake check scam delayed anew

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Defendant fails to show up for trial for 5th time 
A Filipino tourist accused of using a false instrument again failed to appear in the hearing of his case in District Court on Oct 24, reportedly because he was in hospital for treatment of a heart ailment.

It was the fifth time that Celerino L. Tinana failed to show up in court for the start of his scheduled three-day trial, his own lawyer, Andrew Bullett, told Judge K. Kwok.

Bullett, showing to the judge a medical advice from the hospital, said Tinana was expected to stay there for the next two weeks due a heart failure for which “too much medicine has been prescribed.”

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He said the hospital had also advised that the defendant, who was arrested in November 2017 for trying to pass off as genuine a check for US$100 billion in Bank of China branch in Kowloon, would remain unfit for trial until Nov 12.

Bullett asked Judge Kwok to fix a new trial date and said the defense will get a detailed medical report on Tinana’s health condition from the hospital. He suggested a Nov 17 starting date.

Prosecutor Kamlesh Sadhwani, obviously impatient at the repeated postponement of the trial, objected and sought a Nov 12-14 trial date.
“I believe he (Tinana) is not really in hospital at this moment,” he said.

The judge, however, scheduled the next hearing for Dec 17 but instructed Bullett to make sure that his client would be present.

Tinana, an Ilocano, was granted bail in an earlier hearing in November 2018 by District Court Judge Eddie Yip. His trial was supposed to start on Nov 14, 2018, but his lawyer said he was sick and in hospital.



On Oct 30, the trial in District Court of elderly Filipino tourist Brudencio Bolaños will resume after it was adjourned on Sept 24 because of the absence of two witnesses, an HSBC forensic expert and a government psychologist.

Bolaños is being tried on a charge of presenting a fake deposit slip for US$943 billion at the HSBC main office in Central in April last year. -  Vir B. Lumicao


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