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PCG tells employers not to bring their workers to China amid coronavirus scare

Posted on 28 January 2020 No comments
Consul General Tejada moves to stop OFWs being taken to China by their employers

By Daisy CL Mandap

The Consulate has warned employers against taking their Filipino workers across the border amid concerns raised by some that they could catch the deadly novel coronavirus there, or be unable to leave should there be a lockdown.

In addition, Consul General Raly Tejada is calling Filipino community leaders to an emergency meeting this Sunday, Feb.  2, , to discuss the coronavirus contamination.

He said he intends to consult on “measures that we as a community can implement to combat the virus.”
So far, no Filipino, whether in Hong Kong or China, has been infected by the rapidly spreading virus that started in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. The number of confirmed cases in Hong Kong remained at 8 today, while China has more than 4,635 cases, and 106 deaths.

Amid the mounting number of confirmed cases in China, Hong Kong has come under mounting pressure to close its border with the mainland. Even the pro-Beijing party, Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong, has joined the call to ban all entries from the mainland.

Hong Kong’s latest response was to call on all civil servants to work from home for the rest of the week, except those providing frontline services. All leisure parks and museums will also close. Many private companies followed suit.
In a separate move, the Mission for Migrant Workers has issued a statement calling on the Hong Kong government to also address the needs of migrant workers amid the coronavirus scare, including issuing advisories in English or their native language.

The Mission also called on the government and all consulates concerned to join hands in ensuring the safety and protection of all migrant workers.

At his own initiative, ConGen Tejada asked Acting Labor Attache Antonio Villafuerte today, Jan. 28, to issue an advisory to employment agencies to ensure that no Filipino domestic worker is taken by their employers to China during these uncertain times.
 
ALA Villafuerte says agencies face suspension if they fail to stop OFWs being taken to China
ALA Villafuerte confirmed the information, and said he was posting the advisory on the online system, employEasy, which all accredited employment agencies use to communicate with the Philippine Overseas Labor Office.

“I will advise the agencies to tell employers to refrain or stop sending their helpers to China because of the current situation,” said Villafuerte.

That will also include sending them back to Hong Kong immediately. “Bawal naman kasi ang dalhin doon ang worker para magtrabaho,” Villafuerte added.



Agencies who violate the directive could face having their accreditation suspended by Polo.

The move comes amid several requests for help from some Filipina domestic workers who say their employers are taking them to China to ride out the storm caused by the coronavirus, or are preventing them from going back to Hong Kong.

Those who are already in the mainland say they have been asked by their employers to stay put until Feb. 2, the end of the 14-day gestation period for the virus from the lockdown on Wuhan and other affected places in China.

One worker posted, “Gustong gusto ko na umuwi. Kami lang ng alaga ko ang pinapunta dito, tapos sila nagpaiwan sa Hong Kong, tapos sabi susunod, di naman sumunod. Gusto pa yatang mag lockdown dito sa Guangdong bago kami pauwiin.”

This was echoed by another: “Gusto ko lang po ipaabot dito (ang) aking kaba at pag-aalala sa pag- uwi ko pabalik Hong Kong. Dito pa po kasi ako sa China kasama mga amo ko. Gusto ko na po umuwi ng Hong Kong kaso pinigilan ako ng amo ko, kaya need ko po ang inyong mga payo, Nag-aalala po ako.”

Another said, “Need ko po ng advice kasi nandito pa kami sa China. Sabi ng amo ko mas safe dami dito sa virus kaysa dyan sa Hong Kong. Baka daw pag umuwi kami dyan malagay kami sa isolation. Gusto nila mag-extend kami kaso, hanggang 6 na lang ng February ang visa ko.”

One was worried that she will be quarantined when she returns to Hong Kong from Shenzhen. “Meron ba dito na umuwi sa Hong Kong galing ng Shenzhen today? Ask ko lang kung nakauwi ba agad kayo kasi may nagsabi na nag-stay raw muna sa shelter bago makauwi ng bahay. Please pm me. Nandito kasi ako sa Shenzhen at nag-aalala.

Their worry was sparked by reports that Hong Kong would shut down some of its border gates with China starting Jan. 30, leaving only the Lowu and Lok Ma Chau corridors open.
 
HK is under increasing pressure to shut its border with China
Another worry was about catching the coronavirus from their employers who are about to return to Hong Kong from the mainland.

“Mag ask lang ako kung ano ang mabuti kong gawin, kasi yung mga employer ko ay nasa Tsina ngayon. Natatakot po ako kasi baka pagbalik nila may coronavirus silang dala. Ano po ba ang maganda kong gawin?”

The fear is not without basis. A Filipina domestic worker who was put under quarantine on Jan 24 had shared a flat in Ma On Shan with the parents of her employer, who both became sick a few days after arriving in Hong Kong, and were confirmed to have the coronavirus.



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Bakit nababaon sa utang?

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May nagtanong sa isang online group kung ano daw ang madalas na dahilan kung bakit may mga OFW na kabi-kabila na ang utang sa mga financing company (“bangko”), tapos may utang pa sa mga patubuan sa labas kaya mas lalong nababaon sa utang. 

Marami ang nagsabing huwag na lang pakialaman ang nasa ganitong sitwasyon, pero meron din nagbigay ng iba-ibang dahilan, mula sa sobrang luho o yabang, ayaw malamangan, o inaako ang lahat ng gastusin ng pamilya.

Susog ng isa, yung iba daw kasi ay umuutang ng sobra sa kakayahan nilang magbayad, kaya kapag hindi na kinayang bayaran ang isang utangan ay lalapit sa iba pa.

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Isa sa mga nagkomento ang nagsabi na isang malaking dahilan ang mga tao na hindi marunong humarap sa responsibilidad.

Sila yung nangungutang at iniiwan ang “kawawang reference” para magbayad.

“Sana mawala na ang ganitong kaugalian ng mga OFW dito sa HK,” sabi niya. “Sana maging responsableng mangungutang naman po para di tayo nakakaagrabyado ng kapwa.”

Ayon naman sa isa pa, marami ang nababaon sa utang dahil pinapasan lahat ang responsibilidad sa pamilya.

Call us now!

Mern yung sunod-sunod ang trahedya sa pamilya, at walang inaasahan ang lahat kundi siya. Ang masaklap lang, sabi niya, kulang pa ang sahod nila para pambayad sa utang.

“Unawain na lang po natin sila.. Pasalamat tayo dahil hindi tayo ang nasa ganung sitwasyon.” Sabi naman ng isa, hindi naman masama ang mangutang, basta huwag lang tatakbuhan. Sinang-ayunan naman ito ng isa pa, na nagsabing,

“Tama, ang pera kikitain mo pa, pero kapag tiwala ang nasira, mahirap na ibalik.”



Ibinahagi naman ng isa na tuwing may biglaang pangangailangan ang pamilya niya sa Pilipinas ay doon sa isang tita niya tumatakbo para mangutang kaya hindi nababawasan ang suweldo niya buwan-buwan.

Iyon nga lang, siya lang din ang nagbabayad ng mga utang na ito.

Sagot naman ng isa pa, buti daw at may iba silang natatakbuhan, at mabuti na doon na lang sila magkautang sa Pilipinas kaysa dito sa Hong Kong kasi “tiyak, magugulo ang mundo mo.”
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Deaths from coronavirus spike by 40% as experts say infected cases now at 44,000

Posted on No comments
By The SUN


The intensive care unit at Zhongnan Hospital in Wuhan (AP Photo)

The death toll from the rapidly spreading coronavirus that started in the Chinese city of Wuhai topped 800 today, Jan. 27, a rise of more than 40% in just 24 hours.

The rate of infection is also climbing fast, with the Chinese government reporting more than 2,800 confirmed cases, a significant increase from the 2,000 cases reported the previous day.

But what is often not reported is the actual number of patients in Wuhan, the center of the epidemic which has been locked down for the past five days.
According to a report from the South China Morning Post, academics from the University of Hong Kong have estimated that the number of patients in Wuhan had already reached a staggering 43,590 by last Saturday. 

Using mathematical extrapolations, the experts say the number of infected cases would double in 6.2 days.

That would make the novel coronavirus far more infectious than Sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome), which afflicted more than 8,000 people across China, and killed about a tenth of them. Hong Kong was among those severely hit, with 299 deaths.
Mainland officials now say that unlike Sars, the Wuhan coronavirus which causes pneumonia, is infectious even during the incubation period, which could last about 14 days.

The Hong Kong experts warned a pandemic might be close because human-to-human transmission is already happening in major mainland cities.

So far, all the confirmed cases both in China and other parts of the world involve patients who had been to Wuhan.



Hong Kong has eight confirmed cases of infection.

As of midnight last night, the city has banned the entry of all Hubei residents and those who had visited the Chinese province in the past 14 days. Returning local residents are exempted.

Macau, which has 7 confirmed cases,  has adopted a firmer stance, announcing that about 1,100 Hubei visitors in the city would have to return to the mainland or be quarantined.

Several countries, including the United StatesAustralia and Russia, are planning to evacuate their nationals from Wuhan where everyone is virtually quarantined because of the lockdown.

But the Philippines, which has an estimated 200,000 nationals working in China, both legally and illegally, has no plans for a mass evacuation.

Presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo also said in a radio interview that the government cannot force Filipinos working there to leave their jobs.

“If they feel that they are safe, hindi mo mapapaalis yun doon, kasi livelihood nila yun,” he said.

The Philippine government has, however, asked more than 600 Chinese nationals from Wuhan who managed to fly into the Philippines just before the lockdown to return home as a precautionary measure.

Many of them had flown direct from the central Chinese city to Kalibo in Aklan, a major gateway to the famed Boracay island.

Some of the Wuhan tourists who were sent back to the Mainland by the Philippine govt (photo by Epoch Times)

Among the confirmed cases in Hong Kong is a visiting couple from Wuhan who had stayed with their daughter in Ma On Shan before falling ill  

The couple’s daughter and her Filipina domestic worker were both quarantined at the Lady MacLehose HolidayVillage in Sai Kung on Jan 25 as a result.

According to Consul General Raly Tejada, the Filipina has remained asymptomatic since.

“We are hoping she remains healthy and eventually released,” ConGen Tejada has said.

The Hong Kong Health Department reportedly told the Consulate that the worker will stay in quarantine, and no test will be done on her, although her body temperature will be monitored regularly.

“If nothing happens in 14 days, she may leave QC (quarantine camp). If she turns to have fever or other symptoms, she will be sent to hospital for hospital treatment,” said the message.

“Most importantly she is not a patient but just a confinee. We will send updates soonest if any.”
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