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Pinoys in fake ID and burglary case denied bail

Posted on 22 January 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

The Filipino suspects failed in their bail bid at Eastern Court

A Filipino-Chinese former worker at Hong Kong Disneyland being held for allegedly being in possession of a forged ID card has been refused bail by a magistrate in Eastern Court.

C. Arzaga appeared on Jan 22 before Magistrate Bina Chainrai with an offer to raise his bail money to $5,000 from $3,000. His lawyer said the defendant also has somebody to put up a $5,000 surety for his release.

The defendant is facing one count of possessing a forged identity card and another of possessing Part 1 poison, meaning a prescription drug.

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The prosecutor objected to Arzaga’s bail and surety offer, saying he was caught red-handed by officers and, if convicted, would draw a long jail sentence.

But the defense counsel said Arzaga was determined to seek bail because he had a young son to look after. The lawyer said his client also needed to collect his stuff from a hotel where he was staying when he was arrested this month.    


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Chainrai refused Arzaga’s bail application and ordered him remanded in custody until the next hearing on Jan. 30.

In the same court, a Hong Kong-born Filipino bartender and his British buddy detained in connection with a burglary attempt also failed in their bail application.

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Defendants M A Miranda and C Floresca, both 23, appeared in court nearly three months since they were arrested by police at dawn last Oct 28 while allegedly trying to break into The Globe pub in Central.

Chainrai ordered the defendants remanded in custody until the next hearing on Feb. 19.
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HK Filcom extends help to Taal victims

Posted on 21 January 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

DWC admin Medio (with red cap) delivers goods to Taal victims with help from friends

Various groups in Hong Kong have launched fund drives to help the thousands of people who were forced to flee their homes in the wake of the Taal volcano eruption in the Philippines on Jan. 12.

Alert Level 4 remains hoisted over Taal Volcano in Batangas, which means a hazardous eruption is possible within days, so the evacuees have been told to stay put, and well away from their homes.

First to respond were the members of the online group, Domestic Workers Corner, which started their campaign for cash donations hours after Taal began spewing ash and thick smoke.

By Sunday, Jan. 19, DWC, which has 60,000 members online, managed to raise nearly $37,000 with donors mostly sending small sums through the WeChat, Alipay and TNG accounts set up by the group’s administrators for the purpose.

The fund drive will continue until Jan. 27, when DWC plans to give away some of the money raised to members from Batangas, Cavite and Laguna, whose family have been adversely affected by Taal’s eruption.

Another group that quickly harnessed help from members and their friends was Batangas Varsitarian Intl, which is led in Hong Kong by Erwin Marqueses. A call for donations which he posted on Facebook on Jan. 13 stirred many Filcom members to show up with loads of goods at their designated packing place in Central on Jan 19.
By around noon when his group, helped by fellow Batanguenos from the Association of Filipino Builders in Hong Kong, Brix Chico and Ric Mercado, finished its relief operation for the day, 22 big boxes of goods had already been packed and sent on to Batangas.

Several people also came by to give cash donations, including DWC’s Villar who handed Marqueses an envelope containing $3,500 from the funds raised by her own group.
 
DWC's Villar (with glasses) hands $3,500 cash donation to Batangas Varsitarian group led by Marqueses (leftmost)
Named recipient of the boxed goods was Joseph Bautista, an engineer who headed several associations in Hong Kong before settling back in his hometown of Lipa City in Batangas, and is now said to be working with the provincial Coast Guard.

Bautista is putting together a group that will identify the places where the goods should go, and which items should be bought from the cash donations that will also be sent him from Hong Kong.

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Marqueses said the donation drive was just the first in a series of activities being planned by the Varsitarian and other allied groups to raise money for the Taal victims.

Two other events, a one-day volleyball league on Feb 2, and a rock concert called “Rakrakan Para Kay Kabayan” on Feb 23 in front of City Hall in Central, will both be held to raise funds for the same cause.

DWC members have also carried out their own fundraising drives, including a “Photoshoot for a Cause” held on Jan 19, which raised $3,711 for the Taal fund.

DWC founder Rodelia Villar says she’s been overwhelmed by the quick response of members to her plea to extend help. “Every dollar counts,” she said in a post thanking members for their generosity.

Equally heartwarming for Villar were the donations that came from concerned employers of some members. One of them, Dante Wong of Hong Lok Yuen, sent $3,600 through his caregiver, Richel Calvo.
 
Villar accepts $3,600 donation from Calvo's employer
“Other employers gave $100 to $300 but asked not be named,” Villar said. “It was touching to see them showing their concern for our compatriots.”

Much of what DWC has raised so far has been sent on to an administrator, Janice Medio, who has returned home for good in Cavite. More than Php100,000 worth of relief goods has been bought, packed and distributed by Medio and her friends, including DWC member Judith Codilla and a group called Mahika Artist of Deception.

More will be distributed to the victims in the coming days, after Medio has identified the more urgent needs of the evacuees and where the help is most needed.

Also raising funds is United Filipinos – Migrante Hong Kong, which has partnered with the Mission for Migrant Workers in soliciting donations from the public. As in past relief drives, Unifil-Migrante will be helped by its vast network in the Philippines in distributing whatever donations they manage to raise here.

Unifil kicked off its donation campaign later than the others because it was busy coordinating a protest held on Jan 19 against the massive hike in premium contributions by OFWs to PhilHealth, or the national health insurance fund.
 
'Photoshoot For a Cause'
Smaller groups did their own share of raising funds to help the Taal victims, including one that held a “Dance for a Cause” event on Chater Road, and a “Dog Walkers Group” in Mid-Levels, which sent a box of relief goods to evacuees.
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OFWs alerted on strict hospital visiting hours amid spread of Wuhan virus

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

The most serious cases are in North District Hospital in Sheung Shui, near the Chinese border

 Filipinos should be aware of strict visiting hours imposed in Hong Kong public hospitals, according to a welfare officer at the Philippine Overseas Labor Office, as official reports indicate the flu that started from Wuhan province has spread to other parts of China.

WelOf  Marivic C. Clarin said today, Jan 21, that hospital visits have been limited to two evening hours a day at varying times in different wards, and visitors are required to wear masks and wash their hands before and after visiting.

Clarin said those who are planning to visit patients should check the visiting hours and restrictions imposed by hospitals to avoid wasting time and fare money.
She also advised Filipino workers to schedule themselves for free anti-flu shots at designated centers, and employers should do their part by encouraging their workers to get vaccinated.

At Polo, staff members have already been advised to wear surgical masks as a preventive measure and some workers lining up for services have done likewise, Clarin said.
 
Meanwhile, Chinese officials have confirmed cases of human-to-human transmission of the new coronavirus, which is similar to the one that caused the deadly Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome that killed hundreds of people 17 years ago.

Get flu shots, Clarin tells OFWs
The new virus has killed at least six people in China, and infected nearly 300 others. Latest reports indicate it has spread to 20 other Chinese cities, with most of the patients being detected in Hubei province, where Wuhan is located.

Hong Kong, which has no confirmed case of the Wuhan infection, is not included.

In the Philippines, the first suspected case of the Wuhan flu was reported today. A five-year-old boy who had visited Wuhan, was admitted to a hospital in Cebu City after showing flu-like symptoms.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque II said discharge samples were taken from the boy and sent to Australia to find out what strain of the virus had made him sick.
While there has been no confirmed case of the coronavirus in Hong Kong, patients who show symptoms of having the Wuhan pneumonia are being reported daily by public hospitals.

As of noon today, Jan 21, 11 patients (five male and six female, aged 8 to 82) were reported to have been admitted to public hospitals in the past 24 hours after showing signs of the flu.

Yesterday, seven patients (two males and five females aged 1 to 67) were hospitalized, and on Jan 19, 11 others (six males and five females, aged 3 to 87) were admitted to public hospitals.
Currently, there are 21 patients still in isolation, 19 patients are in stable condition, and two patients in North District Hospital are in critical condition and serious condition, respectively, due to underlying diseases.

One patient passed away yesterday but her test result was negative for the novel coronavirus. The Department of Health says no patient in Hong Kong has been confirmed as being infected with the virus.

A Hospital Authority spokesperson has advised the public to avoid visiting patients in wards if they have a fever, or have had close contact with patients with respiratory symptoms in places where novel coronavirus infection may have been transmitted.

Earlier on Jan. 4, the HA raised the alert level in public hospitals to “serious” from the previous “alert” in line with the government’s launch of a program meant to step up  its preparedness and response for new infectious diseases “of public health significance.”
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