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Filipina maid accused of ill-treating 3-year-old ward

Posted on 04 November 2019 No comments
The Filipina was ordered to return to Kwun Tong court on Dec 9

A Filipina domestic worker has been accused in Kwun Tong Court of ill-treating her three-year-old ward on two occasions in September this year.

Ma. Gorettee Nang appeared before Magistrate Ivy Chui on Monday, Nov 4, as the original charge against her was amended and a new charge added.
Nang was arrested on Sept 9 this year when her employer reported to police that she had ill-treated her ward in a manner that might have caused the child a lasting injury.

The second charge was similar to the first but happened on Sept 6, the prosecution said.
Both incidents allegedly happened in the employers’ home in Choi Ming Court, Tseung Kwan O.

The defendant, who appeared without a lawyer, told the court the second incident was accidental.

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But Chui told Nang she was only being asked whether she understood the charge. The magistrate then instructed her to go to the Duty Lawyer Service Office and engage the services of counsel.

Chui adjourned the case until Dec 9 and extended Nang’s bail. – Vir B. Lumicao
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OWWA confirms suicide of Filipina DH

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By Daisy CL Mandap

Police have confirmed the case as suicide
The Overseas Workers Welfare Administration has confirmed reports about the suicide of a 37-year-old Filipina domestic worker in Mong Kok on Saturday, Nov. 2.

Welfare Officer Virsie Tamayao says she has been in touch with the employment agency that deployed the victim, Ellen M.T., to Hong Kong less than two years ago.

The agency representative and Ellen’s employer are expected to go to OWWA tomorrow, Nov. 5, to talk about repatriation.

“We will know more details about the case then,” said Tamayao, who said she had heard of different stories about how Ellen had died.

OWWA records show that Ellen, who was from Lagro in Novaliches, Quezon City, first came to Hong Kong to work in 2012. However, she apparently went back home for awhile and returned to Hong Kong more than a year ago to work for her current employer.

“Since she was re-deployed less than two years ago, she is still covered by mandatory insurance,” said Tamayao.

Tamayao says the victim's family
is entitled to death benefits from
OWWA and mandatory insurance
That means, her family stands to receive USD$10,000 in death benefit from her Philippines-based insurer, apart from the Php120,000 death and burial benefits from OWWA. Both insurers allow payouts even in suicide cases.

A spokeswoman for HK Police said Ellen’s death was classified as suicide, and that there were no suspicious circumstances surrounding her death.

She reportedly hanged herself with a towel in the flat of her employer’s house at 11 Hoi Fai Road in Mong Kok at 10:33 am.

Police who responded to a call for help from a resident of the flat took her down and sent her to Kwong Wah Hospital in an unconscious state. She was certified dead at the hospital.

No suicide note was found at the scene. A post-mortem examination will be carried out to determine the exact cause of death.

Anyone who feels depressed or burdened by a problem may call The Samaritans' 24-hour hotline, 2896 0000 to get free counseling. Filipinos, especially domestic workers, may also call the Social Welfare Attache's office at the Consulate, 2823 8507 where there are trained counselors who can speak to them.



CG to meet HK’s top officials to discuss Filcom concerns

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By Daisy CL Mandap

Image may contain: 1 person
Congen Tejada thanked the Filcom for heeding the Consulate's advice to keep safe

Consul General Raly Tejada says he will bring up security concerns of the Filipino community related to the ongoing protests when he meets with Hong Kong police chief Stephen Lo sometime next week.

Other matters concerning their work and stay in Hong Kong will also be brought up during his scheduled meeting with Chief Executive Carrie Lam in the first week of December.

Congen Tejada gave these assurances in his first consultation meeting with Filipino community leaders yesterday, Nov 3, at the Consulate.

Foremost among the issues he wants to raise is the circulation on Facebook of pictures of a supposed “crime report form” that foreign domestic workers could use to snitch on their employers who keep protest gear and weapons such as petrol bombs in their homes.

The leaflet, which promised a “bounty”, asked informants to report their information to a website, http://803.hk or a wechat number supposedly of Hong Kong police. A quick check of the website shows it is written only in Chinese, making the information highly dubious.


Congen told Filcom leaders to be wary of the dubious-looking 'complaint form'


Congen Tejada said he was also very concerned about the report, given the vulnerability of Filipino migrant workers. However, he was quick to advise Filcom leaders not to fall too quickly for unverified information such as this one.

“Galing lang sa FB, so ingat lang,” he said.

Nevertheless, he promised to bring the concern “to the highest level”, given that it encourages Filipino workers to violate the privacy of their employers, and puts their jobs at risk.

This is not the first time FDWs have been targeted by anti-protest groups. The first false information to circulate on Facebook was about migrant workers supposedly being paid $3,000 each to join the protests.

Congen Tejada said he was confident Filipino workers would not fall easily for such divisive tactics as they are intelligent and adhere to the Consulate’s oft-repeated advisory to keep themselves safe.

The only untoward incident he noted was when an OFW lost consciousness after inhaling smoke from the tear gas hurled at protesters who sought refuge in Southorn Playground in Wanchai last month. It turned out that the Filipina was allergic to the gas, but recovered quickly enough to be sent home from the hospital the next day.



Image may contain: 3 people
About 50 Filcom leaders were invited to the forum
Another issue Congen Tejada is anxious to put to rest is the supposed plan of the Philippine Department of Labor and Employment to embark on a mass repatriation of OFWs from Hong Kong because of protest-related violence.

“Hindi po, hindi mangyayari yan. Dole will have to get an advice from the Consulate,” said Tejada. “May danger, of course, but I don’t think it merits the repatriation or the mass exodus of our people here.”

He also quelled reports that there has been a slowdown in the processing of work contracts to Hong Kong, or that it has stopped altogether.

He cited statistics showing that between July and September this year, when the protests were already well underway, the number of OFWs has actually risen by about 2,000, for a total figure of 238,492.

Despite this, he said the Consulate remains vigilant, with 18 of its more than 70 staff contingent being appointed as coordinators for the different districts in Hong Kong to ensure the safety of Filipino nationals.

During a recent talk with Chief Secretary Mathew Cheung, Tejada said he was given an assurance that the Chief Executive’s recent policy speech was received well by the people in Hong Kong, particularly the promise of affordable housing for everyone.

Cheung reportedly said this was the reason support for the protests has dwindled, although there remains a group of radicals who continue to wreak havoc across the city.
Told by some community media people that the situation “on the ground” remains very dangerous, 

Tejada gave the same advice that he gives to all other Filipinos: “Keep safe.”

Dolores Balladares-Pelaez, chair of United Filipinos in Hong Kong, said protest-related issues are just some of the concerns many Filcom leaders want the Consulate to address.

“Aside from the issues na ni raise ninyo tungkol dito sa pagtatrabaho sa Hong Kong, marami pa tayong issues sa Philippine government. So meron kaming mga katanungan na nais naming masagot ng ibat ibang departamento sa Pilipinas, gaya ng OWWA, SSS, Philhealth at compulsory insurance.”

Told that the new exactions which should weigh heavily on all OFWs were imposed without prior consultation or announcement, Tejada promised to get updates on them and disseminate the information to the community as soon as possible.

He also said he will resume regular consultations with the community, and plans to schedule it every quarter, or once every three months. His announcement was quickly welcomed by leaders who said it was something they had urged previous heads of post to do.

Image may contain: Fernandico Q. Gonong Jr. and Elizabeth Dy
Consul Ausan told the leaders they could call him 'Tito Leo'
Those who joined Tejada at the meeting included newly arrived Consul Leo Tito Ausan, Jr., said to be a Middle East veteran whose last foreign posting was at the Philippine consulate in Vancouver, Canada.

Also at the panel were Deputy Congen Germinia Usudan, Consul Paul Saret, Consul Sheila Arnesto, Consul Bob Quintin, Social Welfare Attache Beth Dy, Asst Labor Attache Angelica Sunga and OWWA Welfare Attache Marivic Clarin. 

Judge rules Filipino tourist in US$943B bank scam has case to answer

Posted on 03 November 2019 No comments

 
District Court
A District Court judge ruled that an elderly Filipino tourist has a case to answer at the resumption of his trial on Friday, Nov 1, for presenting a fake deposit slip for US$943 billion at the HSBC main office in Central in April last year. Judge Stanley Chan rejected the defense’s application for the court to clear Brudencio J. Bolaños, 62, on the ground that a psychologist’s report stated he was suffering from “delusional disorder”.

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The judge dismissed the psychologist’s claim that Bolaños believed former President Marcos had given him the money and that it was insured in London.
 
Chan said that the evidence so far presented in court, including the testimony of the HSBC executive who had interviewed Bolaños, indicated that the defendant knew from the beginning the document was fake.
 
The judge said he had considered HSBC assistant manager Cheung Wan-yuet’s statement that the bank never issued a receipt for US$943 billion supposedly deposited in the defendant’s account by a Marcos foundation on Jul 25, 1983.

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The assistant manager also said Bolaños had no account in HSBC.
 
“I am satisfied the defendant had the intention to make the bank believe the deposit slip was genuine. I reject his application to rule that he has no case to answer,” Chan said.    

    
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The ruling means the trial of Bolaños for using a false instrument will now proceed. - Vir B. Lumicao
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Part 2 on Mario delos Reyes: Fried chicken, techie traps for a man frozen in time

Posted on 02 November 2019 No comments
Mario delos Reyes enjoys first meal as a free man while waiting for his travel papers at the Consulate.


By Vir B. Lumicao

Part 2

A quarter-century of regimented meal menu in jail could have dulled the taste buds of Mario delos Reyes, a recently released inmate in maximum security Stanley Prison, that he had long yearned for fried chicken.

This craving was finally satisfied on Oct 15 when Delos Reyes popped up past lunchtime at the Consulate, escorted by three Hong Kong Immigration officers and two Filipina inmates at the Castle Peak Immigration Centre.

Delos Reyes was enjoying every bite of a Kentucky Fried Chicken meal bought for him by Social Welfare officer Elizabeth Dy as ATN staff prepared his one-way travel paper, the last document he had to secure for his flight back to Manila on Oct 21.


“Lagi kong hinihiling iyon kay Ma’am Beth tuwing dumadalaw siya sa akin sa loob,” Delos Reyes said with a giggle in a telephone conversation a week later.

He said that was his first fried chicken meal since his committal to Stanley Prison in 1994 following his conviction on a charge of conspiracy to murder.

Not that Delos Reyes was too fastidious to find prison food in Hong Kong as bland or poorly prepared as one would hear about what inmates are fed in Philippine jails. It’s just that the former Philippine Constabulary soldier had missed perhaps the best food any Filipino commoner could think of, as if nothing else is supreme to his taste buds than the flavor of crispy fried chicken, whatever brand it may be.

“Pangako ko kasi kay Mario tuwing dumadalaw kami sa kanya noon na iti-treat ko siya ng Jollibee chicken,” Dy said when asked who bought the fried chicken meal for the newly released inmate.

Dy thought Delos Reyes was alone so she sent somebody to run downstairs for a fried chicken meal. She found out later that he had two Filipina companions when Delos Reyes was already sharing his lunch with them.

Prison life has taught Delos Reyes to be Spartan. He says he eats any food. But, in the penitentiary, he learned to make some money out of his prison meals to help his wife Gigi support their children while he was behind bars.


In jail it was the prison warden who decided what the inmates ate. There were three menus for the variety of nationalities serving time in Stanley, a penitentiary for males convicted of serious crimes.

He said he fought for a western meal when he was served Asian menu because meals for the Caucasian prisoners were heavier than the lighter sets for non-whites. The other option was Indian menu meant for South Asian and Middle Eastern inmates.

Delos Reyes said he had to argue fiercely with the warden, a senior superinten-dent, in order to win daily meals of western food.

He discovered that cigarette was a currency in the prison, so he bartered his meals for cigarettes at a rate of two packs for a set lunch. He then sold the cigarettes to inmates who smoked at $1,000 for six packs. Payment was made by the buyer’s relatives to his wife’s bank account.

Through this ingenious way of raising money while in jail, Delos Reyes says he managed to send his three children through school. Later he got help from his wife Gigi who worked as a domestic helper in Hong Kong and Macau so she could visit him regularly.

Back at home in Nueva Ecija with his wife and their two-year-old granddaughter, Delos Reyes says he is reintroducing himself to native food after 26 years.

Not all of these dishes, such as boiled saluyot (jute) leaves and sliced bitter melon or bamboo shoots seasoned with salted anchovy sauce may be delectable to others, but they are filling just the same for the hardy Ilocano who was originally from La Union.

For now, Delos Reyes is reinventing his life outside prison and still adjusting to do his favorite activity, writing undisturbed, in the presence of his granddaughter who is always cozying up to him.

He admits the strongest culture shock in his new world is technology – like how to navigate a cellphone he received as a present from The SUN upon his release.

But he is catching up fast, having opened a Facebook account, and is now able to communicate with the rest of the world through messenger and text messaging.

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Case of ‘abused’ Filipina not over as employer pleads guilty to immigration, labor offences

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Lanie Grace Rosareal


By The SUN

Nearly two years after fleeing what she claimed was the extensive abuse she suffered at the hands of her employer’s live-in partner, a Filipina domestic helper expressed mixed feelings at the conclusion of an immigration and labor case against the pair on Oct 21 in Shatin court.

Lanie Grace Rosareal, 29, was supposed to testify against her former employer Leung Shet-ying, 64, and her partner Au Wai-chun, 66, but she was not called in court because Leung decided to plead guilty to all the charges against her.

Au went scot free after the prosecution offered no evidence against her.

“Honestly, I’m a bit disappointed with Au getting acquitted instead of being convicted, but I’m also already so happy that they (sic) admitted their offenses,” Rosareal said after being told of the outcome.

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She had been outside the courtroom, eagerly awaiting her turn at the witness stand, so she did not hear Leung admit her guilt.

Rosareal said it was a shame she did not see the pair react to what she had to say.

Leung was convicted of not paying Rosareal’s wages on time, and of abetting the violation of her visa condition by allowing her to work illegally in the house of Au’s son in an adjacent building in Tseung Kwan-O. She will be sentenced on Nov 4.

Rosareal’s pro bono lawyer Patricia Measor-Ho says the case isn’t over yet, as her firm plans to apply for a judicial review of the decision by the Hong Kong police not to file charges against Leung and Au .In a letter dated Oct 3 sent to Ho’s law firm, the police said that it was not prosecuting anyone in relation to the case on the advice of the Justice Department.

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Ho finds this unacceptable, and says her firm is planning to apply for judicial review of the police’s decision not to file criminal charges.

“The government is at pains to reassure the public that the existing system in place more than adequately tackles trafficking and forced labour – well how does that sit with the conclusion of the Department of Justice that there is no criminal case to pursue?” says Ho. “Clearly something’s amiss.”

Ho’s firm has been trying to press criminal charges against the two based on Rosareal’s allegation that Au had inflicted harm on her in the last year of her employment by Leung, who did nothing to stop the abuse.

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Crucial to the prosecution of the case was a “penalty notebook” in which Au appears to have made Rosareal list down all sorts of imaginary infractions, for which the employer imposed a corresponding penalty.

When added up, the penalties always exceeded what the helper was supposed to make each month, so she ended up not being paid any wages for months.

Rosareal managed to bring the notebook with her when she fled the employers’ flat on Nov. 9, 2017, along with fellow domestic worker Rowela Suete, who had blown the whistle on Au’s alleged abuses.

Lanie Grace Rosareal with her bruised forehead after her ordeal.


By then, Rosareal had been working for Leung and Au for nearly three years, having signed her first work contract on Jan. 24, 2014.

The two Filipinas were taken to the Consulate’s shelter, after which they both went to the Western Police Station to file a complaint. No statement was taken from them, however, and they were eventually told to go to Tseung Kwan O police station which had jurisdiction over their case.

It took some time before Rosareal was told to return to the TKO station to make a formal complaint. By this time, Suete had already returned to the Philippines, having settled her labor claim against Leung.

Rosareal, on the other hand, pursued her claim at the Labor Tribunal.

At the initial hearing of the case in January last year, Leung offered to pay her former helper only $2,500 for unpaid wages and one-way air ticket to the Philippines.

Rosareal accepted the offer, but reserved her right to pursue her full claim of more than $200,000 for unpaid salary for six months, wage in lieu, cancelled holidays, travel allowance and compensation.

She alleged that Leung would pay her salary each month, but would then tell her to settle the penalties imposed on her by Au, a retired civil servant, for all sorts of alleged misdeed.

The monthly payment she got from Leung was reportedly never enough to settle all of Au’s claims, which were all duly recorded in the penalty notebook.

When asked about this at the Labour Tribunal hearing, Leung said that as far as she was concerned, Rosareal was paid her salary each month. It was not her fault that the maid in turn handed all the money to her partner to pay for her misdeed.

Apart from the non-payment of wages, Rosareal claimed Au subjected her to almost daily torture, including hitting her on the head with a knife and a TV remote control, clawing her wrists and neck, poking her throat with a pair of scissors, and making her bang her head on the floor.

Au reportedly did these less than two years after she was sentenced to two years in prison, suspended for 18 months, for throwing a cup of hot water at a Bangladeshi maid also hired by Leung earlier.

Their encounter in Shatin court was the first in nearly two years, and Rosareal said she had looked forward to giving evidence against Leung and Au to see how they would react, and was disappointed that she did not get her day in court.

Leung and Au each faced 10 counts of failing to pay wages within due date, one count of failing to pay wages within due date on termination of contract, as well as four counts of aiding, abetting, counseling or procuring the breach of condition of stay.

But Leung, as Rosareal’s contractual employer, was the only one against whom the case was allowed to proceed.

As soon as the magistrate began the session, which was conducted entirely in Chinese, the lawyers for both sides informed the court about the deal to allow Leung to plead guilty.

After two breaks, Magistrate Wong Tsz-ho ordered the charges against Leung to be read to her and her plea taken.

Leung pleaded guilty in a feeble voice to each count. At some point during the reading of the charges, she and Au mumbled their objection but Wong’s assistant gestured at them to keep quiet.

Shortly later, the magistrate convicted Leung and dismissed the charges against Au after the prosecution offered no evidence against her.

Wong extended Leung’s bail on the same terms until her sentencing on Nov 4. He told Au to go and claim her bail money from the courthouse.

Au showed up in court in a wheelchair pushed by Leung. Au was wearing a neck brace and a thin plaster cast on her right hand up to her mid-forearm.

Outside the courtroom, Leung and Au encountered Rosareal, who said her former employers gave her intimidating looks.

They met Rosareal again outside the General Services office on the second floor of the courthouse when the helper went to claim her witness’ allowance. Leung and Au went there to recover Au’s bail money.

Rosareal said her solicitors have told her that they will seek legal aid so they can pursue a civil claim against Leung and Au.
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