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Stranded Filipinos begin returning to Hong Kong

Posted on 20 February 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap


Temperature check at Manila airport for Filipino travelers

Relief has replaced 19 days of anguish and frustration for many Filipinos stranded in the Philippines, as they began flying back to Hong Kong on Feb. 19, a day after the Manila government partially lifted a travel ban to allow them to return to their work and homes.

Although the partial lifting of the ban was supposed to take effect immediately, many opted to wait for at least another day before booking their flights because of a lack of clear guidelines from authorities.

The biggest concern was over the waiver or declaration that overseas Filipino workers were supposed to make before being allowed to fly back to Hong Kong. Confusion grew when some netizens said the declaration was supposed to be in legal form, and notarized.


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Another concern was whether all Hong Kong-bound passengers were meant to show either a medical clearance or a barangay certificate before being allowed to board, as other worried travelers said they had been told.

In the end, the qualms were all for naught as the passengers who braved flying out at the first opportunity reported sailing though the check-in and immigration control.

Among the first to post about a hassle-free flight out of Manila was Jennifer Silvano-Briones, a teacher and business proprietor who had agonized with her OFW-aunt who had been stuck in Pampanga for nearly a month.


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“There were no issues upon check-in and going through immigration. Everything was smooth sailing (as we expected it to be),” said Briones in an online post.

“There was also no requirement for a notarized declaration. Just make sure that all the blanks are completed, (and) affixed with their signature.”

OFWs are made to sign this declaration saying they voluntarily put  themselves of potential risk to Covid-19

She accompanied her post with a copy of the declaration form, which in part requires OFWs to subject themselves to “prescribed health checks by concerned authorities” in the Philippines and their place of work abroad.

The form that the OFW is made to sign also carries the declaration “that I am informed and made aware by government authorities that I am putting myself at potential risk of exposure to CoVid-19 by proceeding to_____ (country or territory).”

Surprisingly, non-OFW residents and dependents are not required to sign the same declaration, even if they remain Filipino citizens entitled to the same protection by their government, and are given the same health protection in Hong Kong as migrant workers.

But for Briones, signing the risk declaration was a small price to pay for her aunt’s seamless return to Hong Kong. They both had waited for a tense two weeks since her aunt was supposed to fly back, after spending the Chinese New Year break in their hometown of Capas, Tarlac.

Because of the travel ban on Filipinos departing for Hong Kong, China and Macau, even Briones’ husband was stranded in Manila, so she was left all by herself looking after their four children – aged 13, 6, 3 and 1 – while running their trading business.

Thus, when news got out that the ban on Filipinos flying to Hong Kong had been lifted, Briones lost no time booking a one-way Cathay Pacific ticket for her aunt, even at the steep price of $1,200. She was to learn later that the price had nearly doubled by the day’s end because of the high demand.

Cathay has been on limited flights to and from Manila since the ban was imposed on Feb. 2, while Hong Kong Airlines flies once a day. Philippine Airlines and Cebu Pacific which used to fly at least thrice daily, have yet to resume their flights.

Jennifer with husband  Marc Briones and their 4 children she was left to look after while working

Once her household has settled back to its normal routine and her husband has returned to Hong Kong, Briones says she and her children might take advantage of the prolonged school holiday and fly to the Philippines for a vacation. This time, at least, they won’t have reason to fear that they’d be stuck there indefinitely.

But for others who also want to go home, especially OFWs who have been looking forward to attending their children’s graduation in March, the 14-day self-quarantine that remains in force for Filipinos flying in from Hong Kong, is a big cause for concern.

Nearly all have been granted home leaves that will not be long enough for them to comply with the quarantine period. Others are also worried that overzealous local officials might force them to stay at home to observe self-quarantine.

Asked one in the Facebook page of Domestic Workers Corner, “Sa sitwasyon po natin ngayon tama po bang umuwi tayo sa graduation ng mga anak natin. Wala pa po akong ticket. Magsabi lang daw ako sa amok o ipa-book nila. Isa lang po ang anak ko. Grade 12 po siya. Naguguluhan po ako kasi nagtatanong na amo ko if uuwi pa ako.”

Another replied that she also has one child whose graduation is coming up, but has decided not to push ahead with her plan to go home. Asked why, she said: “Uuwi tapos may home quarantine. Hindi rin ako makaka-attend, useless. Tapos baka habang nasa vacation ka baka biglang mag travel na naman.”

Because of a lack of clear guidelines, the quarantine requirement remains a big cause for concern for all Filipinos traveling to the Philippines. Many of those who had flown to Manila have reported not getting any calls or visits from health officials while some of those who went on to provinces say their barangay officials had been monitoring if they were taking daily temperature checks.

Cebu remains a big trouble spot for those who fly home from Hong Kong, as authorities there require all non-residents to stay in a sanitarium for the entire two weeks of quarantine.

One thing is for sure: they will not be allowed to fly out again until after they have remained in the Philippines for the mandatory 14-day period.
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Infected Filipina is recovered and in good spirits, says PCG

Posted on 19 February 2020 No comments
The first Filipina to get infected by the novel coronavirus or Covid-19 is healthy and in good spirits, says Consul General Raly Tejada, who spoke with her on the phone.

Here is a statement from the Philippine Consulate:

UPDATE ON FILIPINO PATIENT

The Consulate General had a brief telephone conversation with our kababayan. Her voice sounded normal and she is in good spirits. She also has no symptoms (No fever, no colds and no cough). She said that she is well taken care but hospital visits are not allowed given that she is in isolation. Doctors told her she could be released soon if further tests come out negative. She asked that we maintain her privacy and keep her identity secret. The Consulate will continue to monitor her condition and render all necessary assistance.

Consulate officers Virsie Tamayao, Beth Dy and Arnel de Luna
check on the Filipiina's condition at Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital
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If you are one of her friends who hung out with her outside City Hall in Central in Feb 9, please contact Hong Kong’s Center for Health Protection so you can be tested for the coronavirus. The link to their website is here: https://www.dh.gov.hk/english/tele/tele_enq/tele_enq.html

Covid-19 scare batters Filipino businesses

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

WorldWide Plaza which used to teem with Filipinos, is now mostly empty

Businesses in World-Wide Plaza in Central, a favorite haunt of Filipinos, are reeling from the novel coronavirus contagion as sales receipts have shrunk by as much as 70% since most customers have been staying away.

Shopowners and salepersons in the three-storey shopping mall of World-Wide House say the impact of the Covid-19 epidemic now sweeping Hong Kong is worse than the Sars contagion in early 2003.

“Tatlo ang tindahan namin dito sa World-Wide at talagang malaki po ang impact,” one owner of a cosmetics shop who requested not to be named said in an interview on Feb 19.
She said the downturn this time is worse than during the severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) because the contagion then was not as widespread, although it was centered in Hong Kong.

Covid-19, which began in December, continues to ravage the central city of Wuhan, where most of China’s 2,010 deaths and 74,185 full-blown cases were reported as of this writing. The total death toll from Sars was about 600, with half of them occurring in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong reported on Feb 19 its second death out of 62 patients who tested positive for Covid-19 since the outbreak began in December last year.
 
The mall draws in the crowds only on Sundays when many workers send money home
The cosmetics shop owner said the impact of the coronavirus epidemic on her business is much worse than Sars or even the anti-extradition bill protests in the second half of last year.

“Normal sales namin every Sunday used to reach $60,000 to $70,000, now kung maka-$30,000 ka sa Sunday, suwerte mo na,” she said.

She said the downturn that began during the anti-government protests in June last year got worse when Covid-19 spread to Hong Kong, leading the government to advise foreign domestic helpers to remain at home on their rest days.

That appears to have been seen by many employers as a signal that they could already tell their helpers not to go out on Sundays, their usual day off. But the helpers themselves are opting to stay in for fear of the contagion.
“Noon, may lumalabas pa na mga domestic kahit may rally, pinapayagan sila. This time hindi na sila pinapayagan. Ang inaasahan na lang namin mga Chinese na naghahanap ng alcohol, stuff na ganyan,” she said.

The shopping mall used to teem on Sundays with thousands of OFWs remitting money to their families, buying sundry items such as Philippine snacks, air tickets, clothing, jewelry, etc. Now it looks like a neglected bazaar with just a few people buying small items.   

The recent dive in sales is compounded by high rents, such as the $35,000 that this shopowner pays for a small annex of her bigger shop on the second floor. Prices of goods from home have risen on higher transport costs due to flight cancellations by the country’s airlines. 

Supplies are now transported by DHL as Cathay Pacific does not carry liquid cargo such as alcohol, sanitizers and lotions, driving up costs that are passed on to the consumers. Philippine Airlines and Cebu Pacific stopped flying to and from Hong Kong since Feb. 2, when the Philippines imposed a travel ban to Hong Kong, Macau and China.

The shopowner said she had to lay off one staff from each of her three shops in World-Wide during the protests to cope with losses, not expecting that another whammy would follow soon. 
 
Tan happily attends to some rare customers at her shop
Her views about the impact of Covid-19 are echoed by other shop owners like Joy Tan, who used to have three adjacent units in the mall, but now has just a corner shop on the third floor where she sells snacks and ladies’ underwear.

“Lugi negosyo,” Tan said. She said only Cathay Pacific carries her goods from the Philippines now, but the airline can’t transport liquids.

“Siyempre naka-rely ang negosyo ko sa pabango, mga liquid (pero) hindi magsasakay ang Cathay. Wala, bra at panty lang sa Avon. Wala, lugi talaga. Wala ka ring maasahang bibili kasi di rin palalabasin ng amo, natatakot ang amo,” she lamented.

Also hit hard are the shop assistants like Nanay Fe Tacderan, who plans to go back to the Philippines on Feb 22 after sales at the garment shop she helps tend dropped to just a fifth of its former level.

 “I’m going home. I’m going to plant camote in my yard in Cogeo, Antipolo. Even if I go home, at least I have a plot to plant to camote,” said Nanay Fe, who has been in Hong Kong for 25 years. She first came in as a domestic worker, before becoming a dependant of her daughter who married a local.

Sales have dipped even more in a telecom gadget shop where Janet Garan works as a saleslady. She said the shop used to register sales of $50,000 to $$60,000 on Monday to Friday, and up to $70,000 on a Sunday. “Now, it’s difficult for us to achieve $5,000 sales on weekdays and $24,000 on Sunday,” she said.

She worries that her employer might close the shop during the weekdays because of poor sales.

This is one of the worst downturns for AFreight, which has been in business for 3 decades 

One business that is also suffering a steep decline in revenue is A-Freight, the community’s leading door-to-door cargo service which has a shop on the third floor of World-Wide.


Eric Goyena, the shop manager, said sales have dipped by about 50%, adding that the situation during the recent protests was better than now because then, the helpers were still able to go to World-Wide to pack their boxes. This time, they are not allowed to leave their employers’ house.

On the first Sunday of each month, the company used to send out 1,000 boxes for workers’ families in the Philippines, but that has now been halved due to the contagion, he said.

He said that hopefully, the contagion would end during the warmer months and enable businesses to recover from their losses.        

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Friends of Filipina DH with coronavirus sought

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

The shuttered Star Seafood Restaurant in North Point where the Filipina's elderly ward caught the virus
 About 10 friends of a 32-year-old Filipina domestic worker who has tested positive for the novel coronavirus or Covid-19, are being sought by Hong Kong health authorities. The group reportedly hung out outside City Hall in Central on Sunday, Feb. 9, during which they all wore masks.

Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection said at a news conference today, Feb 18, that the Filipina had been sick with cough and cold since early this month. She initially tested negative for the coronavirus or Covid-19, but returned a positive result a few days later.

She is now confined in an isolation room at Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital in Chai Wan.
Chuang said the Center has been trying to contact the friends of the Filipina who lives with her 67-year-old employer  at Mt. Parker Lodge in Quarry Bay.

The elderly woman tested positive for the virus on Feb. 13. Her source of infection was traced to a dinner she had with 28 other people at Star Seafood Restaurant in North Point on Jan. 26.

At least five other people who were there had also tested positive for the virus, including the woman's 37-year-old son. But the Filipina caregiver did not join them, so doctors say she was probably infected by her elderly ward.

After receiving confirmation of the Filipina’s identity, Consul General Raly Tejada immediately sent a team to the hospital made up of welfare officer Virsie Tamayao, social welfare attaché Beth Dy and Arnel de Luna of the assistance to nationals section.

Tamayao, Dy and de Luna check on the sick Filipina's condition at Eastern Hospital

ConGen Tejada said the Philippine government will render all necessary assistance to the sick Filipina.

Just a day earlier, Congen Tejada told Filipino community leaders that seven Filipinos had been put under quarantine, but all were healthy.

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The news came as a blow to the community, as it could mean further restrictions being made on foreign domestic workers who have already been advised by the Hong Kong government to remain at home instead of taking a day off.

Dolores Balladares, chair of United Filipinos in Hong Kong, said it was unfortunate that the Filipina had acquired the disease, and urged the Hong Kong government and the Phlippine consulate to give her all the necessary help.
She also said this should not be used by Hong Kong authorities and employers to prevent foreign domestic workers from taking their weekly day off. 

The news set alarm bells ringing in the community earlier, as it came while a government task force was set to review a travel ban imposed on Hong Kong on Feb. 2 as part of measures to control the spread of Covid-19. 

Despite the setback, the partial lifting of the travel ban went ahead.
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