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Cheers fined $10k for collecting 1,400 Phl passports as security for loans

Posted on 22 November 2019 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap
Consul Paul Saret inspects the 1,413 passports turned over by police after the raid on Cheers on June 5

A hardly-known Hong Kong law was used today, Nov 22, to prosecute and penalize a money lending company for collecting Philippine passports and employment contracts as securities for a loan.

Cheers Holding Company Limited, which also used the name OFC in extending loans to Filipina domestic workers, was fined $10,000 after admitting a count of “accepting security for a loan in a prohibited form” in Eastern Court. The maximum penalty for the offence is a fine of $100,000 and imprisonment of up to two years.

Its sole owner and director, Wong King Yiu Wilson, was bound over for two years as part of a plea bargain, according to Senior Court Prosecutor Tsang Siu Ling.

Cheers was raided by the police in June this year in the course of investigating a complaint, and 1,413 Philippine passports were seized from its three offices across Hong Kong.
The lending company was prosecuted despite its claim that the Filipina loan applicants all signed a declaration stating that they surrendered their documents voluntarily to Cheers (OFC) for safekeeping.

According to the charge which was read out in court in Cantonese, Cheers violated sections 29 (5) and 32 (a) of the Money Lenders Ordinance and regulation 12 of the Money Lenders Regulation, by accepting Ihlyn Sugarol Paquibot’s passport and work contract as security for a loan.

Section 29(5) of the Money Lenders Ordinance states that any money lender who demands or accepts security for a loan in any form prohibited by regulations made under section 34 commits an offence.

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Section 12(a), of the Money Lenders Regulation provides specifically that no money lender shall demand or accept as security for any loan any identity card issued under the Registration of Persons Ordinance, passport, warrant card, or other document establishing the identity or nationality of the holder. 

The charge sheet said Paquibot applied for the loan on May 26, after calling up Cheers and inquiring about the requirements.  A female staff member told her to go to the company’s office at flat A, 19/F, Ngan House at 206-210 Des Voeux Road Central, Sheung Wan, and bring along her passport, employment contract and address proof.

At around 11 am that day, Paquibot went to the Sheung Wan office and obtained a loan for $3,000. Before the money was released to her, she was shown a laminated sign stating the following: “I understand that Cheers Holding (also known as OFC) is a licensed finance company. My monthly interest rate  is around 2.3%. I hereby requesting (sic) the storage service from Cheers (OFC) to keep my important documents (passport and contract). I allow only myself to collect my documents.” She was made to copy the text on a piece of paper and sign it before the money was given to her.

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On June 5, police raided the offices of OFC in Sheung Wan, Shamshuipo and Wan Chai, and arrested Wong and two of his staff. The officers also seized passports, employment contracts, loan agreements and declarations signed by the borrowers.
About 200 Filipinas besieged Cheers' office in Sheung Wan after the raid
During a video interview by the police, Wong said his company had kept the documents at the request of the borrowers. He did not answer questions about Paquibot’s loan application.

In mitigation, counsel for Cheers said, among others, that: the interest rate charged the workers was only 2.3% a month; the company lost $3 million to $4 million because the borrowers had stopped repaying their loan; the complaint arose only because a business rival had written to the Philippine Consulate.

The company’s claim that there was no exploitation of the domestic workers caused quite a stir, and Magistrate Lam Tsz-kan had to ask for the word to be repeated. According to counsel, the workers were living in poor working conditions and the company merely helped them by lending them money.

Receipt issued to a borrower states the amount of loan and terms
Also, according to the counsel, most of the passports were mostly expired, which the borrowers wanted to get rid of, anyway.

It’s a claim that could have been easily debunked by Consulate staff who were kept busy for weeks by borrowers who panicked on hearing about the raid, and wanted to find out how they could get a replacement passport immediately.

Among them was Filipina domestic worker Elen T, who committed suicide recently because of money problems.

On being alerted that police had started returning some of the seized passports to the borrowers at the request of Cheers, Consulate officials protested, and asked that the documents be surrendered to them.

Subsequently, the Consulate declared all the seized passports cancelled, but because of the big number of people involved, modified its previous practice of requiring the borrowers to get their replacement documents at the Department of Foreign Affairs office in Manila.

The borrowers were told that they could apply for a new passport in Hong Kong, but with a shortened validity of five years, instead of 10. They were also made to sign an undertaking that they will not pawn their passports again, or run the risk of not being able to secure another travel document in future.
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Buhay Pinay: Biglang bakasyon dahil sa protesta

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Disyembre  pa dapat ang uwi ni Elsa sa Ormoc City para magbakasyon, ngunit dahil sa gulong dinulot ng protesta sa Chinese University of Hong Kong ay napauwi siya ng wala sa oras.

Nobyembre 11 nang magsimula ang gulo sa pagitan ng mga estudyanteng kasali sa protesta at mga pulis. Dahil dito ay hindi makababa ang mga nakatirang residente sa University.

May mga nakaharang ng kung ano-anong bagay sa daan at may mga nagra rally kaya hindi makadaan ang mga sasakyan palabas.

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Iisa lang ang pwedeng daanan papasok at labas sa lugar nina Elsa kung kaya bihira silang lumabas. Dahil wala na silang stock ng pagkain at maging ang kanyang alaga ay naubusan na din ng  gatas kaya naglakad ang mga amo niya papuntang Tai Po  upang doon mamili.

Ngunit nagkaubusan na din ng stock doon kaya kakaunti lamang ang kanilang nabili.

Noong Nobyembre 14 ay biglang nagdesisyon ang mga amo ni Elsa na umuwi muna ng Korea para masigurado ang kaligtasan ng kanilang anak dahil sa lumalalang sitwasyon. Sa kasamaang palad ay hindi nila pwedeng isama si Elsa dahil biglaan ang kanilang desisyon kaya naiwan itong mag-isa sa bahay.

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Dahil sa takot sa kanilang seguridad ay nagdesisyon si Elsa kasama ang ilang kasambahay na umalis sa University at maglakad papuntang Tai Po. Wala na din kasing amo ang mga ito dahil nagsialisan pansamantala ang mga ito at  umuwi sa kani-kanilang bansa.

Ang ilan sa mga kasambahay ay napilitang bumalik dahil sa layo ng lalakarin at sa takot na masabit sa gulo. Pero si Elsa at ang iba ay nagpatuloy sa paglalakad na hindi alintana ang pagod at gutom dahil ang hangad nila ay makaalis sa magulong lugar.

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Pinagsabihan din si Elsa ng kanyang amo na kahit anong mangyari ay huwag nang bumalik ng campus.

Pagkatapos ng anim na oras na paglalakbay ay nakarating sina Elsa sa Tai Po kung saan nagpahinga muna sila sa isang hotel.

Kinabukasan ay pinakuha si Elsa ng tiket pauwi sa Pilipinas ng kanyang mga amo.

Nob. 16 pa ang alis ni Elsa papunta ng Pilipinas pero Nob 15 pa lang ng umaga ay pumunta na siya ng airport dahil na din sa pangamba na baka magkagulo na naman sa daan.

Napag alaman din ni Elsa na ang iba pang kasambahay sa University na walang mga amo ay pauuwiin din ng Pilipinas habang magulo pa ang sitwasyon.

Maghihintay na lamang sila ng balita mula sa kani-kanilang mga amo kung kailan sila pwedeng bumalik sa bahay ng kanilang mga amo. --- Emz Frial


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Demand for FDHs continues to rise in HK despite chaos

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By Daisy CL Mandap
Image may contain: 2 people, crowd
Are employers leaving HK in droves and terminating their helpers?
Not so, according to data from Immigration 

Bucking fears and forecasts, the number of foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong has continued to rise, even during the most turbulent months of the anti-government protests.

Latest figures from the Immigration Department show that the demand for FDHs has kept its steady ascent, with the total figure by the end of October reaching 399,505. This is more than 14,000 higher than for the same month last year.

A negligible dip of 243 was recorded at the start of the pro-democracy protests between May and June this year, but this was quickly corrected when the number soared by 1,525 at the end of July, when the protests were at their most raucous.
The next month, August, which saw protesters storming Prince Edward MTR station, registered an even higher month-on-month increase of 1,604.

At the end of September and October when the violence from the clashes between protesters and police intensified even more, the monthly spike hovered at around 1,500.

The numbers also show that Filipinos continue to dominate the domestic workers community, with a total population of 219,496 by end of October. Indonesians numbered 170,579 while Indians and all other nationalities had a total ally of just about 4,000 each group

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The official figures come as a surprise to those who trawl OFW social media sites, as these are replete with comments from Filipino migrant workers who claim that they have lost their jobs because of the protests.

Many employment agency operators have also been reporting of Filipino applicants changing their minds about working in Hong Kong, or of having their recruits’ contracts terminated by employers who decided to move elsewhere to avoid the chaos.

A growing number of FDWs say they have been left on their own as their employers chose to go elsewhere to live, or of being told to take an early vacation while the employers assess whether they should return, or stay away for good.
It now turns out all such reports, if true, have hardly dented the demand for FDWs in Hong Kong.

This is something that the Consulate has been at pains to say amid the din caused by calls to either slow down the processing of work contracts to Hong Kong, or to ban Filipino workers from coming here altogether.

The Consulate has consistently said that the number of contracts being submitted to them for processing has remained steady, and terminations have not occurred at a higher rate than before.

Thus, said Consul General Raly Tejada in a recent TV interview, there is no need to stop Filipino workers from coming to Hong Kong.

“I will dissuade people from encouraging this idea of banning workers from coming to Hong Kong,” he said. “There are jobs here in Hong Kong, and the employees are quite satisfied with their work and employers are still taking in Filipinos…so there is no reason for us to implement a ban.”


 Foreign Domestic Helpers (FDHs) Population in Hong Kong


As at the end of Month/Year
Philippines
Indonesia
India
Other nationalities
Total number for all nationalities
Jun 2018
206,917
162,257
4,337
4,804
378,315
Jul 2018
207,075
163,405
4,352
4,779
379,611
Aug 2018
208,820
163,370
4,433
4,770
381,393
Sep 2018
210,315
164,291
4,456
4,799
383,861
Oct 2018
210,773
165,077
4,483
4,808
385,141
Nov 2018
211,361
165,655
4,515
4,793
386,324
Dec 2018
210,897
165,907
4,502
4,769
386,075
Jan 2019
213,110
167,480
4,515
4,766
389,871
Feb 2019
214,018
167,623
4,570
4,758
390,969
Mar 2019
214,211
168,060
4,557
4,758
391,586
Apr 2019
214,358
168,377
4,564
4,737
392,036
May 2019
215,586
168,644
4,625
4,732
393,587
Jun 2019
216,052
167,937
4,621
4,734
393,344
Jul 2019
216,375
169,134
4,652
4,708
394,869
Aug 2019
217,961
169,079
4,709
4,724
396,473
Sep 2019
218,883
169,775
4,722
4,727
398,107
Oct 2019
219,496
170,579
4,737
4,693
399,505

up.

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