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Final: Hong Kong votes Duterte-Marcos

Posted on 10 May 2016 No comments
Rodrigo Duterte won the presidential race in Hong Kong, building a commanding lead at the adjournment of the Special Board of Canvassers at the Bayanihan Center in Kennedy Town.

The count closed about 3:30 a.m. with Duterte ontop withb30,277 votes. He was followed by Miriam Defensor-Santiago with 7,089.
Trailing behind were Mar Roxas with 4,533 votes, Grace Poe with 2,898 and Jojo Binay with 1,118.

Roy Seneres, who died February 8 but whose name was not removed from the ballots. received 10 votes.

In the vice presidential race, Bongbong Marcos pushed further ahead with 25,432 votes.
Following far behind were Alan Pater Cayetano with 12,496 votes, Leni Robredo with 6,155, Chiz Escudero with 1,382, Antonio Trillanes IV with 287, and Gringo Honasan with 178.
The votes counted came from 46,396 voters who showed up to cast their ballots during the voting from April 9 to May 9, representing a 49 per cent turnout out of the 93,978 registered voters listed in 224 clustered precincts. The precincts totalled 95.

The atmosphere in the main hall of Bayanihan Center, where the counting was done, was largely somber, with the crowd dominated by poll watchers from the Duterte and Migrante camps.
After the adjournment, the SBOC will conven eagain at 2pmon Tuesday to count the votes cast by Filipinos in Taiwan, Macau, Beijng and the rest of China.

This is expected to be finished by late Tuesday, barring delays in the transmission of the results from these areas, said Deputy Consul General Kit de Jesus,chairman of the SBOC.

On this the last day of the month-long political exercise, 839 people voted. 

Four latecomers, who arrived more than 15 minutes after the gates had closed, climbed up the concrete path to enter through the exit, and asked to be allowed to vote.


Showing a Facebook post of the Consulate stating that voting on May 9 was from 8am to 7pm, they were angry that the closing was moved forward to 5pm. They said they just could not leave their employers’ homes to vote so they waited until the last day


It took Consul Charles Macaspac several minutes explaining how the mix-up happened, but still the four were resentful.

Consul General Bernardita Catalla was at Bayanihan, overseeing the processing of arriving voters. Then in the evening she mixed the media and community leaders as she watched the canvassing of the votes in the center’s auditorium.

In this year’s general elections, a better version of the controversial PCOS vote counting machine was used, which improved the election process from the voting to the vote counting.

The system calls for the collation of SD cards in the precincts upstairs, for uploading of data to the Collating and Canvassing System, which will transmit the results to the national canvassing center in Manila.

Voting in Hong Kong finished way past 5pm with the last voter, Rhaezcy Dulnuan, casting her ballot at about 5:25pm. She was with three other voters who entered through the front gate of Bayanihan just before the closing of the election was announced.


Duterte, Marcos maintain lead

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Rodrigo Duterte appears to have cemented his lead in the presidential race in Hong Kong, advancing way ahead of the field, according to votes tallied by the Special Board of Canvassers at the Bayanihan Center in Kennedy Town.
As of midnight, Duterte had racked up 27,305 votes. He was followed by Miriam Defensor-Santiago with 6,534.
Trailing behind were Mar Roxas with 4,113 votes, Grace Poe with 2,638 and Jojo Binay with 1,004.
Roy Seneres, who died February 8 but whose name was not removed from the ballots. received nine votes.
In the vice presidential race, Bongbong Marcos pushed further ahead at to 22,766 votes.
Following far behind were Alan Pater Cayetano with 11,490 votes, Leni Robredo with 5,613, Chiz Escudero with 1,265, Antonio Trillanes IV with 265, and Gringo Honasan with 166.
The votes counted so far came from 42,024 voters who showed up from April 9 to May 9, representing an 89 per cent turnout out of the 46,972 registered voters listed in 224 clustered precincts.
So far, 34.4% of the votes in Hong Kong had been canvassed.
The atmosphere in the main hall of Bayanihan Center, where the counting is being done, has been somber, with the crowd dominated by poll watchers from the Duterte and Migrante camps.
At the rate the canvassing has been progressing, the votes in Hong Kong would have been counted by early Tuesday.
After this, the SBOC will then count the votes cast by Filipinos in Taiwan, Macau, Beijng and the rest of China.
This is expected to be finished by mid-Tuesday.
Consul General Bernardita Catalla was seen until 11:30pm Monday, overseeing the collation of SD cards in the precincts upstairs, for uploading of data to the Collating and Canvassing System, which will transmit the results to the national canvassing center in Manila.



Hong Kong starts tallying poll results; Duterte jumps to lead

Posted on 09 May 2016 No comments
The Special Board of Canvassers tallies votes from HK,Macau,Taiwan and Beijing.
Rodrigo Duterte jumped into an early lead in Hong Kong as officals started tallying the votes in the month-long presidential elections that began on April 9.
With four precincts reported as of 8pm tonight, comprising 3,795 votes, Duterte got 2,587 votes based on early results from the Consolidation and Canvassing System.
The remainder was shared by the other candidates, namely, Miriam Santiago 447, Mar Roxas 353, Grace Poe 260 and Jejomar Binay 80.
Poll watchers are gearing up for a long night at the Bayanihan Center in Kennedy Town, with a toal of 95 Sd cards to be tallied just for Hong Kong alone. Also to be canvassed will be the election results of Macau, Taiwan and the rest of China.
Philippine officials in Beijing, Macau and Taiwan joined the special board of canvassers (SBOC) in Hong Kong headed by Deputy Consul General Christian de Jesus.
The process began with turning on the computer to be used in the tallying at about 6:30 pm. De Jesus showed that all the candidates had zero votes. 
Vice Consul Alex Vallespin said the Consul General in Macau, Lilibeth Deapera, as well as a representative of the Embassy in Beijing and the Manila Economic and Cultural Office in Taiwan will be in Hong Kong to joint the count. 
The first results on Hong Kong came in at 6:55 pm in the form of an SD card from SBEI (Special Board of Election Inspectors) 3, the first of 95 such cards generated in Hong Kong.

DAY 30: HK SET FOR ANOTHER RECORD TURNOUT

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The last Sunday of voting went on smoothly
Hong Kong is on track to lead all overseas posts in recording the highest turnout in the ongoing overseas voting for the 2016 Philippine presidential elections.
At the close of the last Sunday of the automatedvoting yesterday, May 8, the total number of voters who had cast their ballots in the month-long election had risen to 45,561, for a turnout of about 49%. The day's tally was 5,474 voters.
The overall figure is close to the 50% turnout forecast by the Consulate, with one more day to go before the polls close at 5pm today.
Despite the comparably high turnout, Consulate officials were still slightly disappointed because a big number of would-be voters had to be turned away because they were among those who were deactivated for failing to vote in the past two elections.
Most of them belong to the Iglesia Ni Cristo church, most of whom started voting only in the last four days of the election, after receiving word from their leaders on who to vote for.
The Comelec secretariat was kept busy by complaints
from voters who were not in the voters list 
According to a Consulate staff, the INC members who were taken off the official list were told when they tried to register in July last year that they were still "active" voters. But about a month later, many were taken off the list after the Commission on Elections decided to purge it of those who did not vote in the 2010 and 2013 elections.
Some of those who tried to vote yesterday said they were not even aware that a mid-term overseas voting was held three years ago.
About two dozen others were also made to wait after their names were not found in the Comelec list, despite registering last year. Those who remembered to bring their registration slip were allowed to vote, after Comelec gave them the green light through text messaging with the Consulate secretariat.
Outside Bayanihan Centre where the overseas voting has been held since 2004, supporters of the major political parties made a final push for their candidates, giving away flyers, ballers and other campaign paraphernalia.
But the campaigners were noticeably less boisterous than the previous Sunday, when police had to be called in after rowdy supporters of presidential bet Rodrigo Duterte met resistance from the other groups.
Despite the high turnout expected this year, the total number would still be way lower than the record figure of 66,500 voters recorded in the first overseas voting in 2004, when manual voting was still in force. The figure represented 75% of the 89,000 registered voters that year.

DAY 27: TURNOUT HITS 40% AS INC MEMBERS CAST VOTES

Posted on 06 May 2016 No comments
Voter numbers surged dramatically today, May 5, as members of the Iglesia Ni Cristo began casting their ballots in the 2016 Philippine general elections, raising hopes the Consulate will hit its 50% turnout target.
At the close of today’s polling at the Bayanihan Centre, 829 votes had been tallied, a record high for a weekday, which drove up the total votes to 37,399.
The total represented a 40.5% turnout of the more than 93,000 registered Filipino voters in Hong Kong.
An otherwise smooth going in the precincts was marred by another complaint from a voter about an alleged receipt misprint.
Consul Charles Macaspac
“The voter said she marked Bongbong (Ferdinand Marcos Jr) for vice president but it was the name of Gregorio Honasan that appeared on the printed receipt,” said Consul Charles Macaspac, who was in charge of the day’s voting.
Macaspac said the woman filed an affidavit, the sixth to do so out of about 20 who made a similar complaint.
Election officials in Hong Kong have been urging voters to fill up a pro forma affidavit if they believe they have been cheated out of their votes so that the Commission on Elections could investigate their complaints.
In Manila yesterday, Comelec Commissioner Robert Lim said in a TV interview that complaints about receipts not reflecting the voter’s choices would not be investigated on site unless there were a significant number of people making the same allegation. He also said the receipts could be used by a losing candidate in an electoral protest.
Today, eight people were not allowed to vote because their registration had been deactivated for failing to vote in the past two electionsm in 2010 and 2013.
Eight other people whose names were missing from the certified list of voters were cleared to vote by the Comelec.
In an unusual case, the election secretariat received an sms from its Macau counterpart verifying the eligibility of a certain Veronica G. Lim, who was trying to vote there.
She was indeed registered in Hong Kong but had moved to Macau, so she was allowed to vote there but her registration in Hong Kong was cancelled.
This was exactly the opposite of what happened on day 1 of the elections, when a woman claiming to be a registered voter in Macau asked to vote in Hong Kong. She was turned down then because the Comelec had not yet issued a policy allowing overseas voters who have migrated to another place to cast their ballot in their new location. – Vir B. Lumicao



DAY 26: TOP OFFICIALS IN CHINA, TAIWAN AND MACAU TO CANVASS VOTES IN HK

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Sunday voting in Bayanihan 
Top Philippine officials in Beijing, Macau and Taiwan will come to Hong Kong on May 9 to join their counterparts here for the canvassing of votes in the Philippine presidential and national elections.
According to Vice Consul Alex Vallespin, the Consul General in Macau, Lilibeth Deapera, as well as a representative of the Embassy in Beijing, will sit with the special board of canvassers (SBOC) headed by Deputy Consul General Christian de Jesus.
A representative from the Manila Economic and Cultural Office in Taiwan will also come with the election results from the island for canvassing in Hong Kong.
Vallespin explained that the special board of election inspectors in the cities in Greater China will be asked to print out results of the balloting, which their representatives will bring to Hong Kong for canvassing.
He said the printed election results would be counted manually before the canvassing.
The news came as 546 more voters cast their ballots on May 6, the 26th day of overseas voting. That brought the total tally to 36,570, or about 39% of the total registered voters of more than 93,000
Consulate officials are still hoping their target of a 50% turnout would be achieved by the last day of voting on May 9. – Vir B. Lumicao


DAY 25: HK TO ALSO CANVASS VOTES FROM CHINA, MACAU AND TAIWAN

Posted on 04 May 2016 No comments
For the first time, Hong Kong canvassers will tally the election results from major cities in mainland China where there are Filipino voters, as well as the results from Macau.
This was revealed yesterday, May 3, by Vice Consul Vallespin, who also said he expects the results from the month-long overseas voting in Hong Kong to be known on May 10. or a day after the election ends.
A voter checking her name against Comelec's list
The canvassing of ballots from the other places will be done after the Hong Kong votes are tallied.
Vallespin, who is overseeing the voting for the Commission on Elections, says he is planning to ask Deputy Consul General Christian de Jesus to call for a meeting with media party representatives on the smooth canvassing of votes.
De Jesus is the chairman of the Special Board of Canvassers.
Vallespin one of the issues to be discussed would be how many watchers would be allowed to witness the canvassing at Bayanihan Centre, where the polling is also being held.
Meanwhile, with just five days to go before the voting ends simultaneously with the election in the Philippines, the daily tally dipped to just 369. It was one of the lowest daily results, but it still helped lift the total tally after 25 days to 36,024, or a turnout of 38.7%.
Hong Kong leads all overseas posts in the total turnout, but Consulate officials are hoping that their minimum target of 50% turnout could still be achieved when the polls close on May 9.
In Manila, the Philippine Stock Exchange fell for the fifth straight day. Analysts say investors are wary of a possible win by Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, who has failed to come up with a firm economic blueprint for the country.
The controversial mayor has also openly declared support for leftist groups, and at various times threatened to cut ties with long-time allies the United States and Australia.
The peso has also lost ground against the US dollar, dipping to around P47 to the greenback for the past two days. - Vir B. Lumicao


 




DAY 24: CONGEN HAPPY WITH POLL CONDUCT DESPITE LOWER-THAN-EXPECTED TURNOUT

Posted on 03 May 2016 No comments
Consul General Bernardita Catalla
A total of 3,627 voted on May 2 in the 2016 Philippine general elections being held at the Bayanihan Centre in Kennedy Town, as Filipinos took advantage of the holiday to cast their ballots.
The tally for 24 days of the month-long overseas voting in Hong Kong rose to 35,655, translating to a turnout of 38.3%. The total number of registered voters here is more than 93,000.
With just a full week of voting left, Consulate officials look hard-pressed to reach their target of a 50% turnout for this year’s elections but do not seem overly concerned.
Consul General Bernardita Catalla said she was satisfied with conduct of the elections, citing the nearly 9,000 people who voted in the past two days alone.
Catalla said election officials were even helping those who were not on the voters list so that they could vote. She cited one voter who waited for a long time but was not on the Hong Kong list of active voters.
“We found out she was active in Singapore,” so the election secretariat contacted the Commission on Elections in Manila and the woman was allowed to vote, Catalla said.
She said a new policy of the Comelec was to allow an active voter in an overseas location who has moved to another place abroad to vote there.
Catalla kept up the call for more Filipinos to vote, and vote wisely.
Congen Catalla assists a voter
“We’ve been urging people to come out and vote because this is the life of our nation, it is part of decision-making. Ngayon, kung yung mga pinili natin ay hindi karapat-dapat, aisisihin tayo ng mga generations after us, kung maayos, pasasalamatan tayo,” Catalla said.
Would-be voters came in small groups just minutes before the closing of the polls, but were allowed to vote because they were already in the Bayanihan grounds when the cut-off came.
Vice Consul Alex Vallespin, who oversees the election, said there were two reports of ballot receipt misprints on May 2, but in both cases, the voters refused to file a formal complaint.


In the first incident in Room 502, a woman complained to the special board of election inspectors that the vote counting machine did not print out the names of her choices for president and vice president.
However, she later admitted that she failed to properly shade the circles corresponding to her candidates. She declined to file an affidavit about the problem.
The second incident, at around mid-afternoon, involved a woman who made a scene in room 501 because her voting receipt allegedly bore the name of Alma Moreno instead of her chosen senator.
Vallespin suggested that she file an affidavit     but the woman              refused, saying that her president and vice president came out right anyway. She also said the “chair” was waiting to broadcast it on social media.
About 40 other would be voters were unable to cast their ballots as their registration had been deactivated over their failure to vote in at least two consecutive elections.
However, about 70 others whose names were not in the list but had registered last year were allowed to vote. – Vir B. Lumicao





DAY 23: COPS CALLED AS CAMPAIGNERS GET ROWDY

Posted on 02 May 2016 No comments
Vice Consul Alex Vallespin and police officers ask the crowd to keep within bounds


For the first time since the election started in Hong Kong, police were called on Sunday, May 1, due to a commotion caused by rowdy campaigners  at the bus terminal in front of the Bayanihan Center in Kennedy Town, where the voting is being held.

Vice Consul Alex Vallespin, officer in charge of overseas voting, and about six police officers rushed to the terminal to ask the campaigners to tone down.

“It turned out that somebody made a 999 call because one group was becoming rowdy,” said Vallespin, who spoke to leaders of the various campaign groups at the bus terminal.

During the discussion, one woman campaigner for Vice President Jejomar Binay said supporters of Rodrigo Duterte shouted their candidate’s name and surged towards voters disgorged by each arriving bus with their campaign tarpaulin.

In one instance, when supporters of the Mar Roxas-Leni Robredo tandem stepped forward and displayed their tarpaulin before a TV crew, the Duterte crowd swarmed in front of them, blocking them off with their own tarp.

“That’s uncalled for, that’s plain bullying,” said the Binay supporter.

Two voting-related incidents were also reported.


One voter complained that she picked Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos as her vice president in her ballot, but got a ballot receipt from the vote counting machine that bore the name of Gregorio Honasan.

“I asked the voter if she was sure about what she’s saying and she said ‘yes,’ because she was even campaigning for Bongbong,” Jun Carlos, a Bongbong campaign leader, told The SUN.

But he cast doubt on claims by some quarters that there was cheating in the overseas voting in Hong Kong just because of accusations by two out of over 32,000 voters who have voted so far.

In the other case, a woman filed an affidavit of complaint about her failing to vote. 

She said that when she went to a mobile registration in Discovery Bay on Sept 5, she was told she did not have to register as she was still an active voter. On Sunday, she was told she had been deactivated.

With just eight days to go in the overseas voting for the 2016 Philippine general elections at Bayanihan Center, officials of the Consulate are still positive that turnout will hit 50%.

Voters continued to stream into the polling center at Bayanihan after the 5pm closing time, but election officials allowed them to cast their ballots.

The day ended with 5,327 voters casting their ballots, the second-lowest turnout for a Sunday in the month-long, five-Sunday elections. The votes lifted the total tally to 32,028, indicating a 34.4% turnout after 23 days of voting.

Consul General Bernie Catalla assists voter who discovered 
she had been deactivated by the Comelec
Vice Consul Vallespin said it was still possible to hit the Consulate’s 50% turnout target on May 2, if more Hong Kong-based Filipinos take the day off and vote.

About 40 people were unable to vote after finding themselves having been deactivated by the Commission on elections. Another 115 had registered but their names were missing on the voters' list and waited for the election secretariat to get them Comelec clearance to vote.

Election officials said earlier in the exercise that they were expecting the Sunday voter crowd to reach 7,000, but that did not materialize despite  the fine weather.

Another vote counting device stopped working in Room 604, but election staff said it worked again after they restarted the machine.

Meanwhile, Ryan Salac, the last voter on Saturday whose ballot was rejected by the counting machine, was given a new ballot to fill out after it was found the problem on Apr 30 was his defective ballot, not the machine.

“We waited for two voters to feed their ballots into the vote counting machine and when we saw they were successful, we called up (Salac) and gave him a new ballot,” said Rhea Balicas, SSS representative who sat as a member of the special board of election inspectors in Room 601.

Two more of the original 12 voters whose ballots were likewise rejected by a broken  machine on April 24 came to cast new ballots, leaving only five of the group still needing to vote anew.  Five of the dozen returned to vote on Apr 30. -- By Vir B. Lumicao

DAY 22: VOTE MISPRINTS AND VCM BREAKDOWN REPORTED

Posted on 01 May 2016 2 comments
Two reported cases of the wrong names appearing in the ballot receipt and one of vote counting machine malfunction marred an otherwise quiet Saturday on Apr 30 at the  Bayanihan Centre.
At the end of the day, a total of 1,143 people cast their votes for the Philippine general election, slightly more than for those of the first two Saturdays of the election.
The total tally for the month-long overseas voting is now 26,701, or 28.8% of the more than 93,000 registered voters.
The first incident happened in room 402 at about 10:30am when a female voter complained that she marked opposition candidate Rodrigo Duterte on her ballot but saw instead the name of rival candidate Mar Roxas on the receipt.
Ryan Salac's ballot was not read by the VCM
In a similar case, a woman who cast her vote at around 3pm in Room 500 claimed she voted for presidential candidate Miriam Defensor Santiago but the receipt bore the name of deceased aspirant Roy Señeres.
Both women called the attention of the special board of election inspectors and filed formal complaints using pro forma affidavit forms prepared by election officials.
“You fill up a complaint form so we could forward it to the Comelec (Commission on Elections),” Vice Consul Alex Vallespin, who is overseeing the balloting in Hong Kong, told the woman in the first incident.
“But they’re telling us that of the more than 26,000 who have voted in Hong Kong, you’re just one of the 13 who complained, out of whom only two formally filed their complaint to the Comelec,” Vallespin said.
The two cases today brought the number of complaints to 15, with four of them formalized by the aggrieved voters.
Vallespin remained puzzled about how the reported quirks happened. He said that as of Apr 29, the election secretariat at Bayanihan had documented and elevated to the Comelec complaints about alleged receipt misprints by the vote counting machines.
The VCMs issue receipts showing the names of candidates the voters marked on their ballots. The voters are asked to check the receipts before putting these in a drop box.
In yet another incident, a voting machine in Room 601 refused to scan the ballot of the last voter of the day, Ryan Salac, who cast his vote at around 5:10pm. 
After consulting Vice Consul Alex Vallespin, the special board of election inspectors (SBEI) in that room sealed the ballot of Salac, had him sign the envelope and told him to return tomorrow morning to try to re-feed his ballot into the machine.
Meanwhile, four of the 12 voters whose ballots were declared spoiled when a vote counting machine broke down in Room 502 the previous Saturday, returned to cast their votes again today, Vallespin said.
The other eight had already been notified to come and vote again tomorrow, he said. – Vir B. Lumicao




DAY 21: GO OUT AND VOTE, SAYS PCG

Posted on 30 April 2016 No comments
Another slow day at Bayanihan
Consulate officials are calling on all registered Filipino voters who have not yet cast their ballots to do so as soon as possible to avoid the last-minute crush.
The call came as the total tally for the month-long overseas voting for the 2016 Philippine presidential election inched up to 25,558 or about 28% of the total registered voters of more than 93,000.
Yesterday, 428 voters showed up at Bayanihan Centre in Kennedy Town to cast their ballots.
With just 10 days left before the balloting ends on May 9, Vice Consul Alex Vallespin, who is overseeing the election, fears the target of at least a 50% turnout may not be met.
Some of those whose names were not in the Comelec list
"We should have a tally of around 7,000 on each of the two Sundays left to hit out target," he said.
The highest voter tally in a single day was registered on the second Sunday of voting on May 17, when 6,367 cast their ballots.
The Consulate is hoping the total tally by the end of the voting period will hit at least 50,000.
Also yesterday, the overseas voting secretariat received more complaints from people whose names did not show up in the official list furnished by the Commission on Elections.A total of 205 people have reported encountering this problem since voting started on April 9.
Consulate staff said that about half of them were eventually given permission to vote after being cleared by the Commission on Elections in Manila.
Among those cleared were voters whose names were found in the unlikeliest place. One reportedly had his name registered in Mexico, while another found his in the seafarers' list.
Both voters said they had exactly the same problem when they voted in 2013, and were surprised that the error had not been rectified.

DAY 20: 2 counting devices arrive as voter turnout seen to spike

Posted on 29 April 2016 No comments
This vote counting machine, one of
two shipped by Comelec to Hong Kong
and delivered on Apr 28 to the
Bayanihan, will act as a reserve just in
case another one breaks down. Election officials
are also planning to use it to conduct the election for Filipino
 seafarers on board vessels calling Hong Kong.
Two new vote counting machines arrived at the Bayanihan Center today, Apr 28, restoring the full complement of 10 VCMs that will handle the expected heavy turnout of voters on the last 11 days of the 2016 Philippine general elections.

The machines were delivered in the morning before the precincts opened, giving the election staff time to install in Room 501, where the previous VCM broke down on Apr 23, leaving only nine in operation.

“All 10 precincts now have VCMs, so, voting should hopefully be smooth on the remaining days of the elections,” said Vice Consul Fatima Quintin, the officer-of-the-day at the polling center.

One VCM-related problem was reported today, with a female voter politely calling the attention of the special board of election inspectors in one precinct to some missing names from the creased printout of her ballot receipt.

The voter did not make a fuss and, instead, offered to write down her statement about the glitch on a pro forma complaint sheet that the election board made available at the voting precincts since Monday.

“The voter was very civil; she told us she would write down her complaint instead of seeking a media interview to publicize what happened,” Quintin said.

She said the woman even promised to tell her friends and other voters that the proper thing to do if they encounter similar problems at the polls is to make a formal complaint.

That was the second formal complaint against an alleged malfunction of the vote counting machines filed by a voter since the complaint form was introduced.

Quintin said with each of the 10 voting precincts now having its vote counting machine, , election officials could pursue plans to visit ships on Hong Kong port calls and let their Filipino crew cast their votes aboard the vessels.

“With the spare VCM, we should now be able to conduct voting aboard ships during the week once we get a firm schedule from our shipping industry contacts,” said Quintin.

Latecomers try to beat the 5pm closing of the
polling precincts on Apr 28.
The plan was mentioned last week by election officials as a novelty to capture some of 49,000 registered voters among the nearly half-million Filipino seafarers deployed on ocean-going vessels.

The voter turnout today improved to 502, increasing the total tally for the first 20 days of the overseas voting in Hong Kong to 25,130, or 27% of the 93,000 registered voters from the estimated 203,000 Filipinos in the city.

With only 11 days remaining in the 31-day balloting that will culminate on May 9, election officials expect the turnout to reach 45-50% given the propensity of some people to wait until the final day to cast their votes.

Only about five people failed to vote today because they had either been deactivated for not voting in the two previous national elections, or their names were missing from the voters list even though they registered at the consulate last year .






Migrants say draft code for job agencies lacks teeth

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Headquarters of Hong Kong Labour Department.







By Daisy CL Mandap

Too late, too little, is how a large support group for migrants has branded the proposed code of practice for employment agencies released on Apr 17 by Hong Kong’s Labour Department for public consultation.
The draft code, which will be open to comments and suggestions from interested parties until June 17, was issued after more than two years of public hearings on issues related to the recruitment of foreign domestic helpers to Hong Kong.
The 100-page document provides strict guidelines for employment agencies, but stops short of imposing penalties or sanctions on violators.
This, according to Eman Villanueva of the Asian Migrants Coordinating Body, is what makes the code far from satisfactory.
“Very disappointed kami, kasi after so many consultations, ito lang ang resulta,” he said.
“It remains to be seen kung may idudulot itong pagbabago, but offhand there is nothing much that the code of practice can do because it is not mandatory”.
As it is now, the code only provides that the Commissioner for Labour could revoke an agency’s license for repeated violations.
However, in a background brief issued to launch the code, the Legislative Council’s manpower power did not rule out taking further steps to tighten the regulation.
“In light of the implementation of CoP (code of practice), the Administration would review the need for making compliance with CoP a statutory requirement and introducing other regulatory measures,” said the brief.
Such regulations could include introducing legislative amendments, like raising the maximum penalty for the more serious forms of violations.
The code was the result of a series of hearings conducted by Legco’s manpower panel starting in early 2014 on the need to protect migrant workers rights, and tighten control over employment agencies.
Dozens of non-government organizations were asked to present submissions, while legislators grilled government officials on some of the issues raised during the hearings.
Most of the groups’ submissions focused on the high placement fees collected from the migrant workers, and the pressure exerted on them by their recruiters to pay up, either directly while still in their home countries, or by taking out loans upon arrival in Hong Kong.
The result was the draft code which defines the roles and obligations of the agencies in their dealings with job seekers or workers and employers alike.
The document also provides for the adoption of best practices for agencies, like prohibiting them from getting their recruits to take out loans to pay for fees, or from withholding the worker’s passport.
A key feature is the requirement for agencies to draft a service agreement separately with the employer and the worker, setting out clearly the terms of their engagement, including fees. While the code is silent on how much can be collected from the employer, it is clear in saying that only 10% of the worker’s first monthly salary may be charged to the worker.

Mother of dumped baby charged with infanticide

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

A Filipina maid who dumped her newborn baby in a mall toilet appeared in Tsuen Wan court on Apr 14, charged with infanticide.
The 37-year-old woman was arrested after she went to the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section to seek help to surrender.
“She came to me and I called the police to inform them that I was going to accompany her to the station to surrender,” said Hermogenes Cayabyab Jr.
The police detained the suspect for further questioning.
PathFinders, a Hong Kong charity aiding and protecting migrant women and their children, offered to assist the woman and urged pregnant domestic workers to seek help, no matter how difficult or embarrassing it may be.
The NGO’s deputy chief executive Luna Chan said: “We can provide counselling and access to justice services for the woman if she is in need.” She requested The SUN to relay the message.
Local newspapers citing investigators reported that the woman confessed to giving birth to a stillborn and dumping it in the toilet.
The baby was found by a clerk in Chan Kee Plaza in Sham Tseng at about 7:45 pm on Apr 4 after she looked for the source of a foul smell in the toilet. The infant was believed to have been dead for two days. Its placenta and umbilical cord were still intact.
Cayabyab, who interviewed the woman identified as Aileen P., said the baby’s father is an African.
He said the employer was supportive when she learned of the maid’s predicament but dismissed her upon hearing of her arrest. The Filipina was less than a year into her second contract with the employer, who lived in Tsuen Wan.
PathFinders’ case managers and social workers help guide and counsel all women regardless of visa status in a non-judgmental manner, PathFinders said. It has assisted more than 3,000 women, babies and children in this situation over the last eight years.
“The issues affecting Hong Kong’s pregnant foreign domestic workers and their babies who are born here can be extremely complex and difficult to unravel,” Kay McArdle, CEO of PathFinders, said.
She urged any worker who suspects she may be pregnant to seek advice early on.
“Do not delay. From a medical perspective, delayed intervention presents risks and complications for all concerned. You are not alone. We urge you to call or whatsapp to PathFinders’ hotline on 5190 4886,” she said.

2 Pinoy transgenders held on sex charges

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By Vir B. Lumicao

Two Filipino transgenders separately pleaded not guilty on Tuesday, Apr 26, to charges of soliciting for an immoral purpose and for breaching their condition of stay.
The arrests came as an officer as the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section noted that many Filipino transgenders were coming to Hong Kong as tourists and end up working illegally in Wanchai. He said they were possibly being brought to Hong Kong by pimps or handlers who profit from the illegal act.
The two tourists, Mark Anthony Reyes and Junisan Catarungan, who were in police custody, appeared briefly before Magistrate Bina Chainrai at Eastern Court.
No details about their cases and their arrests were read in court, except that they were both arrested in Wanchai last weekend.
Chainrai set the hearing of Catarungan’s case for May 11, and Reyes’ for May 12,
They were both remanded in custody and no bail application was made on their behalf.
A case officer of the NGO Midnight Blue, whose advocacy was the rights of lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgenders, accompanied relatives and friends of the two defendants to the court.
The officer, Kin, briefed the group about the procedures the two defendants would go through in court.
In a brief chat with The SUN, Kin said LGBTs were treated better now than last year, after a Filipino transgender sought court protection against the alleged inappropriate treatment “she” received from correctional staff.
Kin said Midnight Blue had been receiving positive feedbacks from LGBT detainees about their improved conditions in the detention center.
This was confirmed by Vice Consul Fatima Quintin, who said all Filipino transgenders are now held in Siu Lam Psychiatric Centre, originally a facility for prisoners who require psychiatric observation, treatment, assessment or special psychological care.
Quintin said LGBTs who have undergone a complete sex change are now being attended to by female officers especially during body searches.
Their special needs, such as hormone injections to help make the change successful, are being addressed at a hospital within Siu Lam.
Kin said Midnight Blue knows of only two Filipino transgenders among the LGBTs from various nationalities who are in the detention center. However, other sources said nine Filipino transgenders are currently being held in Hong Kong jails.

Voting smooth, so far; officials hope for higher turnout

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Nakaboto na si Marilyn Marasigan (kanan), ang OFW na unang bumoto noong ika 9 ng Abril at pinakahuling botante ng araw na iyon. Nireject ng VCM ang balota ni Marasigan at dineklarang 'spoiled ballot' ito. Tinawagan ng Konsulado si Marasigan para pumunta sa Bayanihan Center para muling ilagak ang kanyang boto. Kaharap ang media at si Vice Consul Alex Villespin, binuksan ng Special Board of Election Inspector ang selyadong balota at si Marasigan mismo ang nagpasok sa Vote Counting Machine. Tagumpay na tinanggap ng VCM ang balota at resibo ng boto ni Marasigan.


Except for the four vote counting machines (VCM) malfunctioning because of the high humidity, the first two weeks of voting in Hong Kong proceeded smoothly.
As of April 27, a total of 24,628 overseas Filipinos in Hong Kong had cast their ballots at the Bayanihan Center in Kennedy Town, out of the 93,000 voters who are registered in Hong Kong. Consulate officials, who are overseeing the poll, said they hope more people will vote in the coming days.
Voters have until May 9 to elect a new president, vice-president, 12 senators and one partylist.
Of the four VCMs that malfunctioned and sent back to the Manila headquarters of the Commission on Elections, three have been replaced by spare machines sent by Comelec in the first week of voting. The Consulate is asking for at least four more spares, with about two more weeks to go before polling ends on May 9.
Vice Consul Alex Vallespin, head of the election board that conducts the voting in Hong Kong, was amazed that despite only nine vote counting machines operating, the election has not been disrupted.
But while the polling went smoothly, voters hardly noticed that four VCM had crashed by Apr 23.
The last incident which happened at around 2:45 pm on April 23, caused Consulate officials to scramble to draw up contingency arrangements ahead of what is expected to be another heavy voter turnout the next day, a Sunday.
Three voters who failed to insert their ballots into the machine in room 501 were asked to put them inside sealed individual envelopes which they were asked to sign, then hand over to the SBEI for safekeeping. They will have to reinsert their own ballots into another machine at a future date.
Vallespin said he is optimistic the machine breakdowns will not cause too much of a problem.
But there were events worth noting.
Amid the quiet day at Bayanihan on April 26, was a big fuss on social media over a cheating claim by a supporter of presidential candidate Rodrigo Duterte. (https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=eva%20ocate% 20villa%20video)
The supporter who cast her ballot on Apr 17, returned to Bayanihan on Apr 24, to complain about an SBEI (special board of election inspectors) who allegedly threatened to file a case against her for taking a photo of her ballot receipt.
The voter said she took the photo because the receipt did not show the names of her chosen president and vice president.
But according to Consulate officials, the receipt just got crinkled on top so the names overlapped. Taking a photo of the receipt is, indeed, a violation of Comelec rules.
After some explaining by Consulate officials in the presence of media representatives and poll watchers, the voter eventually calmed down.
However, a video of her being interviewed by Duterte supporters about the alleged cheating circulated on social media.
On April 27, another voter roused members of the Special Board of Election Inspectors in Room 603 when she raised a howl over why the names printed on her tear-off ballot receipt were not those of the candidates that she had marked on her ballot.
Vallespin rushed to the room when the issue was relayed to him.
“We told the voter that looked impossible, but we asked her to file a complaint so that we would send it to the Comelec,” Vallespin told The SUN.
He said the voter declined to fill out a pro forma affidavit stating her complaint.
Vallespin said SBEIs were supplied the affidavit forms so that voters who complain about what they perceive as cheating in the precincts can file a formal complaint that would be investigated by the Comelec.
“It seems some people are seeing mirages,” a puzzled Vallespin said of some voters’ claims about mismatched ballots and receipt printouts. “I can’t still make out how such things happen.”
He said he was doing a report to the Comelec about the various voter complaints relating to the vote counting machines installed in the polling precincts.
So far, he added, only one voter has filed an affidavit (on April 26), complaining that her receipt showed more than the 10 senatorial candidates she had picked.

Another incident noted by poll watchers on April 25, was when a voter was mistakenly given two ballots, because these that were stuck together.
When a poll watcher said the ballots could not be inserted into the vote counting machine, the SBEI (special board of election inspectors) marked the ballots as spoiled.
But according to Vallespin, the voter was made to choose which of the two ballots she wanted to insert into the machine: the first where her choices for president, vice president and senators were marked, or the second with her partylist vote.
The voter chose the first.
More drama ensued on Apr 23 when a woman claiming to be a resident reportedly blew her top upon learning that she could not vote because her name had been deactivated by Comelec.
According to a Facebook post by Consul Charles Macaspac, the woman failed to vote in the past three overseas elections.
Comelec has deactivated voters who failed to cast their ballots in at least two successive elections.
“We were not informed! You should have texted us, trabaho niyo yan! Ang hirap sa inyo, OFW lang inaasikaso niyo! OFW lang sila, residente kami!” the woman reportedly shouted.
That led Macaspac to step in and tell her she should have read the reports in community newspapers and watched Philippine television. The woman retorted by saying she only read the SCMP and watched ABS-CBN.
Macaspac’s post about the irate voter drew the ire of many Filipinos, who were particularly incensed by the woman’s arrogant assertion that she, as a resident, had better rights than an OFW.
Obviously miffed himself, Macaspac closed his post with the statement: “Isang boto po para sa bawat isang rehistradong Filipino. Walang residente, walang OFW, lahat Filipino.”
Other residents, however, has other problems.
In the case of old timer Carmencita D. Han, her trip to Kennedy Town would have been wasted after taking a circuitous two-hour trip by bus, train and taxi from her home in Tsz Wan Shan, and then taking 15 minutes to limp her way up to the secretariat because of her arthritic legs.
The reason: she had used a name when she registered and another when she went to the  information desk. Her name on her Hong Kong ID did not appear in the list of voters. But before thing went out of hand, she remembered that she brought her passport which bore the name she had used to register.
“I registered as Carmencita D. Bautista, but I remarried about six years after my husband died in 1995,” she said. She then married a Korean trader surnamed Han, and when she got a new HK ID card, she used his surname.
She said she last went to the polls in 2010, when she voted for incumbent President, Benigno S. Aquino III.
What encouraged her to travel all the way from Tsz Wan Shan to vote? She said she wanted her candidate to win and even placed a bet on him.She is hoping the government will give farmers more help, provide children better education, and the country is rid of rape, drugs, and killings.
“Kung sino’ng gusto natin, yung nakikita nating may ginagagawa para sa bayan,” Aling Carmen said.
After checking with the Commission on Elections which gave the all-clear, Consulate staff helped Aling Carmen secure a ballot and feed it into the vote-counting machine.
Aling Carmen came to Hong Kong in the 1960s with her first husband, Ruben, a musician. Their children who were all born and raised in Hong Kong, are now grown-ups with families of their own and have adopted different nationalities.
Still, the list of people unable to vote because their names were not in the list furnished by the Commission on Elections, is growing.
As of 3pm of April 25, 34 voters had found to their dismay that their registration had been deactivated because they failed to vote twice consecutively in previous elections.
Another 80 who registered last year were not on the list.
Those whose names were deactivated did not stand a chance, but those who had been mistakenly left out of the list were made to wait while the secretariat texted Comelec to try to get them cleared to vote.
Those who had been inadvertently dropped from the official list were able to vote after Comelec gave the Consulate the go signal through an exchange of viber messages.
One voter from Sai Kung who listed up in the voter registration at the Consulate last year, was disappointed when her name was missing from the Comelec voters list.
“They told me to come back and bring my registration slip so I could vote,” she said.
Another woman, Arlyn Panes from Mid-Levels, said she had registered several years ago and was surprised not to find her name on the list.
When asked if she voted in the past two national elections, she said no. She said she was not aware of the Comelec deactivating nearly 14,000 Hong Kong-based voters from the list for failure to exercise their rights.
If there are fears officials harbor about the election, it is that turnout would be lower than their target of 45 to 50 per cent.
Their fears were heightened on Apr 25, a Monday, when only 334 voters turned up—one of the lowest turnout so far.
But this could be explained by the fact that work must have kept most Filipino voters from trooping to the voting center.
Measures have been adopted to raise turnout, including providing buses to offer free rides to those who live in farflung areas to come to Bayanihan Center to vote. The buses were paid for by private companies and non-government groups who joined the campaign to convince voters to exercise their right.
Outside the voting center, in the bus terminal where the buses unload the voters, campaigners from all sides formed a gauntlet through which voters had to go through.
This was formally deemed legal after the Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) on April 20 lifting the Commission on Elections (Comelec) ban on campaigning. The ban is set out in Republic Act 9189 or the Overseas Absentee Voting Act which prohibits campaigning abroad during the 30-day overseas voting period.
The high court allowed campaigning abroad except in Philippine embassies and consulates, as well as other premises where voting takes place.
The TRO was obtained by Filipino-American businesswoman Loida Nicolas-Lewis, who said the prohibition on campaigning overseas violates the right to assembly and freedom of expression.

Pinay jailed 16 months for drugs

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A former domestic worker who had pleaded guilty to one count of drug possession was sentenced on Apr 27 by a High Court judge to 16 months in prison.
Veronica Baylon, 45, was also originally charged with breaching her condition of stay for overstaying since May 2010. She pleaded guilty to that charge in an earlier hearing and was given a three-month sentence to run concurrently with the new sentence.
Before the sentencing, Baylon’s counsel told Judge Joseph Yau that he had received a report from the police indicating the drug seized from her during a raid in a North Point hotel room in May 2015 was for her own use to relieve her asthma. During that raid,  the officers also found out that she had a baby.
The report also said the rest of the methamphetamine hydrochloride or “ice” and equipment that police found in the hotel room belonged to her boyfriend, Aziz Khan, a drug abuser who introduced her to drugs in 2013.
In mitigation, the defense lawyer sought leniency for Baylon, who he said finished six contracts as a domestic helper in Hong Kong before her last contract was terminated and she was forced to overstay her visa.
The lawyer said his client was very remorseful and had learned a bitter lesson.
Yau noted Baylon’s claim that she used ice to treat her asthma. He also said she had two previous convictions including one for breach of condition of stay.  
Baylon, a commerce graduate, came to Hong Kong to support her three children who were reportedly neglected by their father. But while in Hong Kong she got pregnant by a boyfriend, then after she gave birth she cohabited with another man.
Yau said that since Baylon had been in custody for about a year, she could be released soon. – Vir B. Lumicao

DH jailed for indecent assault on ward

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By Vir B. Lumicao

A 45-year-old Filipina domestic helper was sentenced on Apr 21, to a total of 4 years and six months in jail for indecently assaulting her young male ward more than three years ago.
The sentencing of the self-confessed lesbian, SRM, came more than a month after her conviction on Mar 4 for three counts of indecent assault committed against the boy, then 8 years old, between July 1, 2011 and Aug 31, 2013.
In sentencing, District Court Judge Johnny Chan said: “The defendant has done much damage to the boy. The defendant’s duty was to take care of the victim when his parents were away, but she flagrantly breached that duty and assaulted the boy.”
He said the boy would need a long time to recover and would have to be undergo therapy. The impact report presented to the court cited the child victim’s “recurrent nightmares” and “crying in the middle of the night” following the assaults.
But earlier, another report submitted by a clinical psychologist said he interviewed the boy three times before the trial and found him “calm and settled”.
Because of the apparent discrepancy in the two reports, defense lawyer John Hemmings advised the defendant to immediately ask for legal aid so they could appeal her case. –

X-rated na kahihiyan

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Sobrang kahihiyan ang inabot ni Rose matapos ikalat sa Facebook ang malaswa niyang larawan ng umano’y naging boyfriend niya sa Hong Kong ng tatlong taon na. Nakikipagkalas na kasi siya sa boyfriend dahil may asawa silang pareho pero hindi pumayag ang lalaki kaya blinock ito ni Rose sa Facebook. Nagalit ang lalaki at ipinost ang mga litrato ni Rose na malaswa. Hindi ba nakunteno ang lalaki ay hiningan nito ng pera si Rose, at ang banta ay kapag hindi siya nagbigay ay patuloy nitong ipapakalat ang mga masagwang litrato. Nakapagbigay na ng medyo malaking halaga si Rose nang malaman niyang  nakita na ng mga kababayan niya ang mga litrato niya dahil dumaan ang mga ito sa kanilang news feed. Hindi pa sana niya alam na kumalat na ang kanyang larawan kung hindi sinabi ng kanyang kababata na narito din sa Hong Kong. Pati ang asawa ni Rose na nasa Pilipinas ay alam na din. Mabuti na lang at hindi siya hiniwalayan nito, at pumayag na lumipat na lang sila ng bahay para makaiwas sa kahihiyan. Sising sisi si Rose sa ginawa niya pero huli na ang lahat. Sa tulong ng isang kaibigan ay nag-report na lang siya sa Konsulado, at nagpatulong para makasuhan ang dating kasintahan dahil sa pagba blackmail nito at paninirang puti sa kanya. Nagpaabot naman ng babala ang Konsulado na iwasan ng kahit na sinong Pilipino, babae man o lalaki, na huwag maghubad sa harapan ng camera kapag nakikipagvideo call at huwag na huwag ding magpapadala ng malaswang litrato.
Si Rose ay mula sa dakong norte sa Pilipinas, may asawa at mga anak. – Marites Palma

Playboy ang peg ng asawa

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Halos anim na taon nang hindi nagpapang-abot sa Pilipinas sina Ems at ang kanyang kabiyak dahil pareho silang OFW. Narito sa Hong Kong si Ems at nasa Middle East naman ang asawa. Puro sa telepono na lang sila nag-uusap at sa Facebook. Minsan ay humingi ang kanyang asawa ng sulat na imbitasyon para makapunta ito sa Hong Kong, pero laking gulat ni Ems dahil nakita niya sa Facebook na may kasamang ibang babae ang asawa sa pamamasyal nito dito. Noon lang naisip ni Ems na ang babae pala nito ang dinalaw ng kanyang asawa at hindi siya. Sumama lalo ang loob ni Ems dahil nakuha pang ipagyabang sa Facebook nung babae ang mga larawan nila na parang siya ang tunay na asawa ng lalaki. Walang magawa si Ems kundi manahimik dahil alam naman niya na kanya na sadyang babaero ang asawa. Hindi lang iisa ang babae nito kundi marami sila, at nakikilala pa mandin ni Ems sa Facebook dahil ipinapakilala naman siya ng mister niya bilang asawa nito. Pero hindi pa rin alintana ng mga babae nito ang estado ng lalaki, bagkus ay nag-aaway pa nga ang mga ito sa kanilang lugar. Ang hindi lang matanggap ni Ems ay ang paggamit ng mga babae sa kanyang Facebook account para awayin siya at pati ang mga anak nila ng mga dalagita at binatilyo na. Alam niyang pati ang mga ito ay nasasaktan sa pinaggagawa ng ama. Nitong huling buwan ay umuwi sa Pilipinas ang mister niya dahil nagtapos ang isang anak nila, at nabalitaan niya na umuwi din sa Pilipinas ang babaeng dinalaw nito noon sa Hong Kong. Nalaman ni Ems na nagkasabay ang uwi ng dalawa kaya malamang daw ay nagtagpo muna sa Maynila ang dalawa bago sila umuwi sa probinsya. Sa iisang bayan sila nanggaling kaya nalalaman lahat ni Ems ang bawat galaw nila. Natuto na lang siya na magkibit-balikat dahil nasanay na daw siya sa kalokohan ng lalaki. Sinubukan na niyang makipaghiwalay sa asawa ngunit hindi ito pumayag, sampu ng mga magulang nito. Sa kabila kasi ng pambabae ng kanyang asawa ay hindi nito kinakalimutan ang kanyang responsibilidad bilang ama sa kanyang mga anak. Patuloy ang pagsuporta nito sa mga anak, at pinaganda pa lalo ang kanilang bahay. Katwiran na lang ni Ems, nagpapasalamat na lang siya dahil hindi sila iniwan ng kanyang asawa, di katulad ng iba na kapag nambabae ay kinakalimutan na ang pagiging asawa at ama sa mga anak. Si Ems ay 43 taong gulang at tubong Cagayan Valley. – Marites Palma
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