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Intl Women’s Day marked with call to jointly fight Covid-19 and govt inaction

Posted on 09 March 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap


Indonesian rights activist Eni Lestari with a poster showing a key demand for migrant workers

Hong Kong politicians and union leaders joined foreign domestic workers in marking International Women’s Day this year with a call for solidarity in fighting the coronavirus threat amid what they call as government neglect.

The call was made at a joint press conference held on Chater Road in Central today, Mar. 8.

Among those who spoke was Carol Ng, chairperson of the HK Confederation of Trade Union, who accused the government of not acting quickly enough to close the borders with China, resulting in the rapid spread of the virus.

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“This epidemic shouldn’t have been handled this way. If the majority of the borders were closed earlier, and started the isolation earlier, the community in Hong Kong wouldn’t have to pay such a high cost,” Ng said.

She said among those hardest hit by this government neglect are the foreign domestic workers who need to do much of the cleaning up and the sterilizing, not to mention looking after the employer’s family who mostly stay at home to avoid infection.
“But what do they get (in turn)? They are being restricted from going out on Sunday, on their day off (with their employers) telling them, ‘better stay home.’

She said her group has been receiving reports of migrant workers being terminated by their employers just for insisting on taking their day off.
 
Carol Ng speaks while Shiela Tebia- Bonifacio looks on
Shiela Tebia-Bonifacio, spokesperson of Asian Migrants Coordinating Body, highlighted the many problems faced by migrant domestic workers, including being paid “slave wage,” having to work more than 16 hours a day, and not being given “humane accommodation.”

The spread of the coronavirus disease or Covid-10, has made their situation worse, said Bonifacio.
“It has highlighted the problem of migrant domestic workers with long hours and lack of proper accommodation. Much of the workload has tripled because the members of the family are all present due to the suspension of classes and employers are working from home.”

In addition, she said the migrant workers are expected to clean the house frequently and intensively, using potentially harmful cleaning agents like bleach.
But to make matters worse, she said the HK Labour Department has issued the discriminatory advisory that FDWs should consider staying at home on their rest day to prevent the spread of the virus.

Earlier, Bonifacio also led Filipino migrant organizations in marking International Women’s Day by hitting out at the Philippine government for imposing additional fees on migrant workers, most of whom are women.
 
Tebia, Wu and Ng are joined at the table by legislator Helen Wong and ex-legislator Leung Kwong-hung
She also said the Duterte government’s imposition of a travel ban to Hong Kong has left thousands of overseas Filipino workers stranded in the country, “wreaking havoc on their livelihood.”

Also expressing solidarity was Democratic Party legislator Helena Wong, who paid tribute to the migrant workers, saying that without them many Hong Kong people would not be able to go out to work.

Wong added, “We hope the government will listen to your demands and improve the working conditions as well as the working hours of migrant workers.”

Another speaker, Meilin Wu of the HK Women Workers Association, called on the government to provide more help to women who are forced to stay at home because they have to look after their children or other family members.

In a joint statement with Gabriela HK, the HKWWA also called on the government to alleviate poverty, implement a living wage for all, recognize domestic work as work, and improve the working conditions of migrants.

The day-long celebration was highlighted by various groups dancing to the “One Billion Rising” worldwide campaign to end violence against women.


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4th Filipina migrant worker confirmed to have Covid-19

Posted on 08 March 2020 No comments
By The SUN

Two of the Filipina patients live here at Swiss Towers in Tai Hang
with their employer who first tested positive for the virus

A fourth Filipina domestic worker is confirmed to have the coronavirus disease, Covid-19. She was among four new cases reported earlier today (Mar 8), bringing the total number in Hong Kong to 113.

The Philippine Consulate confirmed the patient’s nationality in a brief statement issued at about 9pm tonight. It said the Filipina, who is 47 years old,  is “in good spirits and not showing any symptoms.”

“Following the discharge of one patient last Friday, the total number of Filipino Covid-19 positive patients stands at three (3). The Philippine Consulate General in Hong Kong is extending all necessary assistance to them.

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Local media reports say the fourth Filipina to catch the disease is one of two domestic workers of Yvonne Chow, a socialite member of the Hong Kong Jockey Club who tested positive on Feb. 25.

Chow’s other helper, a 29-year-old Filipina, was taken to Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital after showing symptoms, and was confirmed to have the disease the next day, Feb. 26.

At the time, the second helper was asymptomatic but was put under quarantine along with Chow’s husband and son.

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Chow is believed to have passed on the virus to her brother, sister-in-law and pet Pomeranian, the first known human to animal transmission of Covid-19.

The three other cases reported today included a 76-year-old man who recently visited India. He began to have diarrhea on Mar 2 and sought hospital treatment afterwards.

Another is a 41-year-old British national who had been to Japan and London on business trips before returning to Hong Kong.


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The third case is a 55-year-old man who lives in North Point and is the husband of an infected woman.

Meanwhile, the University of Hong Kong is arranging virus tests for two top officials after a 38-year-old woman who was among Hongkongers airlifted last week from Hubei province, was diagnosed with the coronavirus yesterday.

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Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Patrick Nip Tak-kuen and Director of Immigration Erick Tsang Kwok-wai returned to Hong Kong on the same flight as the infected returnee.

A government spokesman said Nip and Tsang were in good health.
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Diskriminasyon na lalong nararamdaman ngayong may Covid 19

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Hindi na bago ang ngayo’y nangyayaring diskiminasyon laban sa mga dayuhang manggagawa, na kung tawagin ng mga taga Hong Kong ay kunyang.

Sila ngayon ay iniiwasan at, kung maari, pinagbabawalang lumabas ng bahay tuwing day off nila upang hindi mag-uwi ng coronavirus. Pero bakit sa araw-araw, sila naman ay pinalalabas upang mama-lengke?

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Malawakan ang suporta ng mga taga-rito sa hiling ng gobyerno na huwag nang lumabas ang mga DH sa kanilang day off. Pero para sa mga DH, ito ay malaking dagok sa kanila dahil ang kahulugan nito ay legal na silang mapapagtrabaho sa kanilang araw ng pahinga.

Makikita rin na may pagtatangi sa kaitaasan ng pamahalaan, dahil ayaw nilang baguhin ang kahilingan —gaya ng pagbabawal sa mga amo na gamitin ito upang ilegal na pagtrabahuin ang kanilang DH. Ang dahilan nila ay ito ay para din naman sa kabutihan ng mga DH mismo.

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Kabutihan bang maituturing kung, dahil bawal kang lumabas, hindi ka na rin makpagpapadala ng pera sa iyong pamilya? Hindi ka na makakapasyal kasama ang mga kaibigan? Hindi ka na makakabili ng mga kailangan mo sa bahay?

Sa sobrang takot sa sakit, maraming mga employer ang naging OA sa pagbabantay-sarado sa kanilang DH. Dapat, kapag galing sa labas, anila, maligo agad at ang mga damit ay idiretso sa labahan. Mayroon pa nga na nakahanda na ang alcohol at disinfectant upang i-spray sa kanila kapag umuwi. Pero madamot naman sa face mask.


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Saan batay ang mga gawaing ito? Siyempre hindi sa syensya. Ayon sa mga eksperto, kailangan mo lang na magsuot ng face mask, madalas na maghugas ng kamay, at panatilihing isang metro ang layo mula sa kausap.

At hindi naman lingid sa lahat na dalawang Pinay lang, sa populasyon na 210,000, ang nagkasakit, at nahawa sila sa kani-kanilang mga amo.

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Kahit noon pa man, nakakapansin na tayo sa liit ng pagtingin ng mga taga-rito sa mga taong nagsisilbi sa kanila.

Isang halimbawa ang isang kainan sa Central na, kung ordinaryong araw, ang kubyertos na ipinagagamit sa mga kumakain ay metal. Kung Linggo, kung kailan ang karamihan ng parokyano ay Pilipino, plastic ang gamit.
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Scrap the travel ban

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By Daisy Catherine L. Mandap

It has been nearly a month since the Philippine government slapped an ill-conceived and oppressive travel ban to and from Hong Kong. Although it has been partially lifted to allow stranded OFWs and HK residents to return to their homes and jobs, the ban continues to make life miserable for many, especially our migrant workers.

A case in point is the 14-day requirement for all Filipinos to stay in the Philippines for self-quarantine. Without adequate health personnel and facilities to enforce an honest-to-goodness check on every Filipino who has arrived since Feb. 2 when the ban was imposed, this self-quarantine has meant absolutely nothing. And yet it remains, and continues to worry many OFWs planning on taking a home leave soon.

Compounding the problem is the lack of clear guidelines from the government, which leaves the public to rely solely on the direct testimonies of those who have gone home from the time the ban was imposed. But as is often the case in such situations, the story could vary from person to person, and all because enforcers are not themselves sure of what is expected of them.

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Our Consulate, which should be explaining the government’s actions, has been left without much to base their statements on, either. Thus, it has refrained from explaining how the so-called self-quarantine, Philippine-style, works.

Like everybody else, the country’s top representatives in Hong Kong know that the quarantine should last for 14 days. But how this period is supposed to be determined, or whether any exemptions could be given in emergency cases, is still anybody’s guess.

Mainly from direct testimonies, one learns that new arrivals are able to leave their houses from day one, and mingle as they wish. Most don’t find the need to keep a daily temperature check as was told them on arrival at the airport because nobody checks on them.

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But this is how it should be, considering that Hong Kong’s rate of infection has remained steady and comparatively low, and the government has maintained a very transparent and efficient system of managing the contagion.

Still, the quarantine requirement is there, ready to be used by zealots like Cebu Governor Gwen Garcia who has forcibly detained arriving passengers from the banned areas, but only if they’re not local residents. Those from Cebu were allowed to quarantine at home. Now, what could possibly justify such a crazy and highly irregular move?

Because of such paranoia, one OFW mother who lived in nearby Bohol was not able to rush to the bedside of her dengue-stricken daughter, the only reason why she decided to go home. With her on the plane from HK were two fellow OFWs who were also prevented from going home, and attending the funeral of a family member.


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The partial lifting of the ban sparked the hope of many OFWs that they could now pursue plans of going home, mostly to attend their children’s graduation. But the overwhelming concern now is that they are allowed by their employers only a few days’ leave, which means they cannot complete the 14-day requirement for the mock quarantine.

It makes one feel bad to tell them that they must remain in the Philippines for two weeks, otherwise, they can’t leave. Worse is having to deal with the question of whether they can be granted exemption because all they want is a quick exit to attend a family member’s funeral.

The answer is inevitably a no. Not while the oppressive ban remains in place.

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Another cause for concern is the dearth of flights from Manila to Hong Kong, which has driven up the price of a return air fare, further adding to the distress of stranded passengers. Our two local airlines have been routinely blamed for this, as they have stuck to their announcement of resuming flights only on Mar 28 at the earliest.

It turns out, Philippine Airlines and Cebu Pacific can’t resume flights because their all-Filipino crew will be decimated after just one day of flying because of the quarantine, and them not being in the list of Filipinos allowed to fly out. No amount of explanation or appeal to the government appears to have worked, to the detriment not just of the airlines, but also their passengers.

But the worst thing to have emerged from this haphazardly crafted travel ban is the requirement that OFWs flying to Hong Kong must sign a declaration or waiver indicating that they chose to leave while knowing the risks involved in flying to Covid-infested HK. Non-OFWs are spared the humiliation, but why?

Why make hardworking Filipinos who make up the backbone of our economy execute this utterly useless and demeaning declaration? As Filipinos, aren’t we all entitled to protection - however little it may mean under this dispensation- from our government?

To add salt to the wound, the bright boys who crafted this useless piece of paper made it a notarial document, so wolves began preying on frazzled OFWs again, making them pay for the form and its notarization - when it’s supposed to be free, and could be accomplished right at the airport before they leave.

Now comes another indication that Hongkongers have been given the short end of the stick in the government’s frantic but belated effort to cobble up a containment policy after the death in Manila on Feb 2 of a Chinese man from Wuhan.

With South Korea reeling from a rapidly accelerating rate of cases – more than a 1,000 now after less than a week – the Philippine government has decided to impose travel restrictions. Filipino tourists are no longer allowed to fly to the virus-plagued country, but residents and OFWs remain free to come and go as they want.

Flying in, the ban was imposed only on those coming from South Korea’s worst infested region, as if there is no way for them to just simply move to another place, and fly from there to the Philippines.

Most unfair of all to Hong Kong travelers is that there is no quarantine being imposed on anyone arriving from the country now seen as the new epicenter of the contagion.

If our government cannot apply our laws uniformly, it should stop hanging on to the vestiges of a ban that now looks more like it was put in place so as not to isolate China, which has become a virtual no-man’s land since the new global epidemic was traced to one of its key cities.

Hong Kong does not deserve to be isolated and its Filipino residents used as pawns in this political game. The oppressive ban must be chucked out in full. Now.
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‘I am not a scammer,’ says face mask seller

Posted on 06 March 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap


Indoplas face masks from the Philippines are highly sought-after in HK

One of the biggest online sellers of surgical masks from the Philippines has come out to say she is not part of any scam, a day after two fellow Filipino migrant workers named her as the supplier of some $200,000 worth of masks that were not delivered as promised.

R.F. told The SUN that a container-load of the high-grade Indoplas face masks she was supposed to distribute to buyers was “quarantined” in Manila on Feb. 14, amid a surge in local demand for them, and has remained there since.

All the buyers were duly notified of this development and given regular updates, she said.
She added she is still hoping the shipment would eventually be released, but knowing that many of the buyers were just fronting for other people, mostly local Chinese, she has begun giving back their money, even if it meant advancing some of it out her savings.

But R.F. said she is just one of two sellers contacted by fellow domestic worker, E.B., who acted as the middleman for the transaction. R.F. said she did not receive any of the payments directly, and just monitored them for her long-time supplier in the Philippines.

R.F. said it was E.B. who contacted the buyers and had them send the money to a relative’s account in the Philippines through a remittance agent in the New Territories. E.B.’s relative then sent the payment directly to R.F.’s supplier.
For example, F.B. said that of the $120,000 worth of masks ordered by M.G., another domestic worker, and coursed through E.B., less than half was sourced from her supplier.

The other order for three boxes worth $24,465 which was cited in a separate complaint filed with the Consulate by another Filipina, was not coursed through her, R.F. said. 

But as soon as she heard that M.B. had filed a complaint about the undelivered masks with the Consulate, R.F. said she immediately returned an initial $30,000 directly to the real purchaser, a local Chinese man named KY.

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She said that although no money was paid to her directly, she will to go to the Consulate this Sunday, Mar. 8, to return all the payments made to her shipper for the stuck shipment, just so she can clear her name.

She showed a list of refunds she has made to various Filipino buyers between Feb 23 and 25, totaling about $122,000, as proof that she does not intend to run away from any of them.

The returned amounts ranged between $650 to the $30,000 paid to M.G.’s buyer.

M.G. belatedly sent a message acknowledging the payment that R.F. had made to her friend and buyer and said “hindi lang po siya ang may responsibilidad nyan, marami sila. Kawawa naman yung tao, nadiin ng husto samantalang yung iba eas-easy lang.”

R.F. said some of her buyers would accompany her to the Consulate this weekend to help clear up the situation.

“Sasamahan daw po nila ako pumunta sa Consulate at willing sila mag witness na nag refund na ako kasi nadidiin daw ako and magsasalita sila about sa mga napasok nilang pera,” she said.
 
Hours of queuing for face masks have made many people in HK to source the much-coveted items online
R.F. said this was the first time her bulk orders had been put on hold. She said she had sold huge amounts of goods in the past, including face masks, and had not encountered the same problem. For this delayed shipment, she said her outstanding order was for a total of P1.3 million.

But she did acknowledge that there are many scammers around, mainly those who ask for advance payment, then block the buyers as soon as they receive the money, often by direct bank transfer or through remittance agents.

She also said she has contacts in Manila who can check shipment destinations, and so she knows when someone is lying when they say their expected delivery did not arrive on time.

R.F. said there had been a steady stream of Hong Kong customers asking for her help to acquire masks from the Philippines, especially the quality ones made by Indoplas, an established medical supplier in the country.

When her supplier first sent out masks, R.F. said the amount was as low as $40 a box, but when the demand began to surge, the price rose to a minimum of $140 per. Still, many locals consider that a steal, considering that the same quality masks sell for no less than $200 a box in many pharmacies in town - if you can find them.

Among those who have placed bulk orders with her help are groups that supply the much-needed protection for construction workers at the airport, and another who said he wanted to give them away to needy people.

As she chatted, a neighbor reportedly contacted her to ask if she could help order 5,000 boxes of masks from the Philippines, but she declined.

“Masarap po sana magbenta kung di lang bawal,” she said. “Tapos nadadamay pa kami na maayos (magbenta) sa mga nag-i scam.”

For now at least, she has been telling all would-be buyers to go directly to her supplier in the Philippines, with her just monitoring the transactions.
Her employer has been extremely kind and supportive of her, said R.F., and the least she can do to repay that is to stay clear of the mad scramble over what’s become the most desired shield against the deadly coronavirus.
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