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Judge tells Filipina she can’t ask court to help collect debt

Posted on 16 October 2017 No comments
A Filipina who sought the High Court’s help in collecting the $36,000 claim awarded her by the Small Claims Tribunal was told she had gone to the wrong place.

Deputy Judge Kent Yee rejected the appeal filed by Eugenia V. Managan when she could not explain why she sought the court’s help to go after Genny Bell Panes who failed to pay her back.

 “You got it all wrong, Madam,” Judge Yee told Managan, adding that the High Court is not a claims court.

The perplexed judge noted that the adjudicator, Brian Mak, had in fact entered judgment in favor of  Managan when Panes failed to show up to counter the claim at the Tribunal.

Managan, who is in her 40s, told The SUN it was the staff at the Tribunal who told her to appeal the case to the High Court. 

The La Union native, who said she had been a domestic helper in Hong Kong for 20 years, filed the claim on May 2, alleging that Panes reneged on her written promise to repay her debt in January last  year.

The case was first heard by Mak on June 7 but Panes was absent. She also did not appear at the trial on Aug 1, so Managan was awarded the claim.

Managan said she learned that Panes had gone home to Iloilo two months ago but was already back in Hong Kong.


But a quick check with the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section showed Panes was issued a one-way travel document because she was terminated by her employer and had no passport. -VBL    

Two Pinays hunted for hurting compatriot

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A night of moon-watching and merrymaking turned ugly on Oct 5 when two Filipinas reportedly assaulted a compatriot during a quarrel at Deepwater Bay Beach on Island Road in southern Hong Kong.

The victim, a 45-year-old domestic worker surnamed Gastillo, was taken by responding police to Ruttonjee Hospital in Wanchai for treatment of injuries to her forehead, right hand and right leg, police told The SUN.

She said police were still searching for the two women who attacked Gastillo.

The case has been classified as assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

The officer said the incident took place at a barbecue area in Deepwater Bay Beach at 3am on Oct 5. She said the victim had a spat with the two women that turned physical when the pair assaulted Gastillo.

Local newspaper reports said Gastillo and the attackers belonged to two different groups of Filipinas having a barbecue on the beach while celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival.


The assailants allegedly pushed the victim to the ground, causing her injuries. Her friends called the police but the two assailants had already left when officers arrived. - VBL

Nakulong dahil sa illegal work

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Dumating na sa Pilipinas noong gabi ng Okt 11 si Mae, isang Ilongga na taga Passi City, matapos makulong dahil sa pagtatrabaho ng ilegal.

Nasa ikatlong buwan pa lang sa trabaho si Mae nang mahuli ng Immigration sa airport habang nagsusundo ng mga bagong dating na katulong na ni-recruit ng kanyang amo na may-ari ng isang employment agency.

Hindi nalaman ng kanyang mga kamag-anak sa Iloilo kung saan ikinulong si Mae, pero tinawagan sila ng mga awtoridad sa Hong Kong para sabihing “ready for deportation” na daw ito.

Sinabi din sa kanila na ang amo nito ay sinampahan ng kaso ng Immigration para sa pagpapatrabaho ng ilegal ng kanyang katulong.

Ayon sa batas ng Hong Kong, hindi legal ang magtrabaho sa iba, at sa labas ng bahay ng among nakapirma sa kontrata.

Kabilang sa mga bawal ang magtrabaho sa shop, restaurant o opisina, kahit ang mga ito ay pag-aari ng amo. Bawal din ang magtrabaho sa ibang bahay, kahit pa ang may-ari nito ay malapit na kamag-anak ng amo. Naghihintay ngayon ang kanyang mga ka-pamilya para sa paglalahad ni Mae ng buong kuwento kung paano siya nahuli at nakulong. Si Mae ay may asawa at tatlong anak. – Merly T. Bunda

Bawal mag shorts sa bahay

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“Don’t wear shorts in front of Sir,” ito ang unang sinabi kay Ana ng kanyang among babae sa unang araw pa lang ng kaniyang paninilbihan sa kanila.

Nagulat si Ana sa tinuran ng amo dahil una ay hindi naman siya talagang mahilig mag shorts at pangalawa ay wala naman siyang balak na pumarada sa harap ng among lalaki na kita ang mga hita at binti.

Hindi man kagandahan ay may hitsura pa rin si Ana at bata, kaya siguro may pangamba ang among babae na maakit ng Pilipina ang kanyang asawa. Hindi kasi mahilig mag-ayos at magbihis ang among babae, at pati ang araw-araw na pagligo ay kinakatamaran kaya malamang na natatakot ito na mabaling ang pagtingin ng asawa.

Gayunpaman ay tanging “Yes, ma’am” ang kanyang isinagot sa amo para hindi na humaba pa ang usapan.

Dahil sa sinabing ito ng among babae ay lalong pinag-ingatan ni Ana na hindi mapalapit sa among lalaki. Sinunod din niya ang mga patakaran ng among babae kaya naging maayos ang kanilang samahan. Ngayon ay malapit nang matapos ang unang kontrata niya sa kanila at sinabihan na siya ng amo na pipirmahan siyang muli. Si Ana ay dalaga at naninilbihan sa mga among Intsik sa Mid-Levels. – Ellen Almacin

Pagod na si Rose

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Sumuko si Rose sa dami ng pinagagawa sa kanya ng amo na kadalasan ay hindi na makatwiran.

Gumigising ang amo ng mga alas kuwatro ng hapon at kaagad siyang uutusan ng kung ano-ano, katulad ng pagpapadeposito sa kanya ng tseke mga 20 minuto bago magsara ang bangko ng alas singko ng hapon. Dahil may kalayuan ang bangko ay kailangan niyang tumakbo para makaabot.

Minsan naman ay may pinapa-deliver sa kanya na mga kahong plastic para sa mga files na 2 x 3 feet ang laki at mabigat. Sukat ba namang sabihin na i-push cart na lang niya ang mga ito sa layong dalawang kilometro. Sa galit ni Rose ay sinigawan niya ang amo ng, “Why don’t you just rent a van?”

Mula noon ay hindi na naging maayos ang kanilang relasyon.

Nag-iinit ang ulo ni Rose sa mga ganitong utos dahil pagod na pagod siya sa gawaing bahay. Mula paggising niya ng 8 ng umaga ay kumakayod na siya. Nagpapakain ng alagang matanda, namamalengke, naglilinis, naglalaba at kung ano-ano pang gawain sa bahay.

Kung tutuusin, hindi na niya dapat trabaho ang mga inuutos ng amo, na kadalasan ay kailangan pa niyang gawin nang madalasan. “Pagod na ako maghapon, siya kagigising pa lang, tapos ay kung ano-ano ang inuutos. Hay naku!,” ang sambit ni Rose.

Sa kabila nito ay magiliw at mabait namang makipag-usap sa kanya ang amo, hanggang sabihin ni Rose na hindi na siya pipirma sa panibagong kontrata.

Nagalit bigla ang amo at sinabihan siyang wala siyang makukuha para sa long service dahil siya ang  umayaw sa kanilang kontrata. Sa isip naman ni Rose, di bale nang wala siyang makuhang extra na bayad, basta makakawala lang sa amo. “Sa edad kong 50, hindi ko na kailangan pang mahirapan, uuwi na lang ako ng Pampanga,” ang sabi niya. – George Manalansan

Tinakbuhan ng mangungutang

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Sising sisi ngayon si Ruby dahil pinagamit niya ang kanyang pangalan sa isang taong nakasabay lang niyang mag-training sa OWWA at kapareho ng employment agency para ito makapangutang.

Hindi ito nagbayad at kasalukuyang nagtatago kaya si Ruby ang nagbabayad sa pautangan para hindi siya maeskandalo at matanggal sa trabaho, lalo at napakabait pa naman ng kanyang amo.

Hindi kaiba sa ilang nabola ng mga talamak na mangungutang ang nangyari kay Ruby. Dahil sa matamis na dila ng kausap ay ni hindi niya ito pinapirma ng kasulatan nang ibigay niya dito ng buong tiwala ang pera mula sa pautangan.

Ni wala man siyang kopya ng pasaporte o HKID ng nangutang kaya lalo siyang hirap maghabol ngayon. Hindi na niya ito matawagan sa telepono, at naka block na siya sa dalawang Facebook account nito.

Pinayuhan siya ng isa pang kasamahan sa agency na lapitan ang nag recruit sa kanila para makuha ang ilan pang impormasyon tungkol sa balasubas nilang kakilala. Pagkatapos ay pumunta daw siya sa assistance to nationals section ng Konsulado at subukang humingi ng tulong para papanagutin ang nagtatago na ngayong Pilipina.

Naging mapait na karanasan ito kay Ruby, na nagpapayo ngayon sa mga katulad niyang bagong salta na huwag basta-basta magtitiwala kahit kanino, lalo na sa mga nakasabayan lang sa agency. Huwag daw maawa sa kanilang mga drama dahil baka ikaw naman ang maging kawawa sa bandang huli. Si Ruby ay tubong Cagayan Valley, may asawa at anak, at mag-iisang taon na naninilbihan sa mga among taga Ma On Shan. – Marites Palma

Isang ulirang ina

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Ganap nang medical technologist ang panganay ni Ate Lenny at computer engineer naman ang kanyang bunso nang makiusap na bumalik sa kanila ang ama ng mga ito na isang baldado na.

Bagamat iniwan sila ng ama noong sila ay mga bata pa kaya ang ina ang mag-isang nagtaguyod sa kanila ay nanaig pa rin ang kabaitan ng dalawang bata. Sila na ang nagkumbinsi kay Ate Lenny na tanggapin muli ang kanilang ama.

Hindi na daw nakapalag si Ate dahil tanggap na tanggap na ng kanyang dalawang anak ang pagbabalik ng kanilang ama kahit na pinabayaan sila nito noon habang siya ang nagsakripisyong malayo para mabigyan sila ng magandang buhay.

Mabuti na lang at kahit naging malas siya sa asawa ay naging napakapalad naman niya sa kanyang mga amo dahil sobrang bait ng mga ito sa kanya. Binigyan siya ng mataas na sahod at trinato na parang kapamilya. Ilang beses nilang ginastusan ang pamamasyal ng mga anak ni Ate sa Hong Kong, at tuwing magkakaroon sila ng problema sa pera ay agad silang tinutulungan.

Maayos, masipag at mapagkakatiwalaan daw kasi si Ate, lalo na sa pag-aalaga sa kanilang nag-iisang anak. Natuwa pa daw ang mga amo nang malaman na ang kanilang anak ay nasanay sa pagkain ng mga lutong Pinoy katulad ng adobo at sinigang na hipon.

Hanggang ngayon na nasa Europa na ang alaga ay hinihiling pa rin na lutuan siya ng pagkaing Pinoy ng yaya kapag nagbabakasyon ito sa Hong Kong.

Ang mga sarili niyang anak ay maganda na rin ang takbo ng buhay. Kamakailan lang ay napili ang bunso niya ng kumpanyang kanyang pinagtatrabahuan sa Pilipinas na ipadala sa New Zealand para doon na magtrabaho.

Walang pagsidlan sa tuwa si Ate tuwing ikinukuwento sa mga kaibigan ang pagiging suwerte niya sa mga anak. Baka daw ang mangyari ay sa New Zealand na siya mag for good at hindi sa Pilipinas. Si Ate Lenny ay tubong Nueva Ecija, 55 taong gulang at kasalukuyan paring naninilbihan sa mga mababait niyang among Intsik sa Shatin. – Marites Palma

Manindigan sa tamang kabayaran

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Madalas na mapikon si Leony, 45 at taga Zambales, tuwing nag-uusap sila ng kanyang mga kaibigan tungkol sa suweldo, lalo na nang dagdagan ng $100 kamakailan ang suweldo ng mga dayuhang katulong na pipirma ng kontrata pagkatapos ng Set. 29.

Kasi, kahit 10 taon na na siya sa Hong Kong ay ang minimum na $4,310 pa rin ang kanyang sahod, samantalang ang isang bago nilang kakilala na tatlong buwan pa lang dito ay mas mataas pa ng $100 ang sahod sa kanya.

Lalong nagngingitngit si Leony dahil mas marami nang di hamak ang gawain niya kaysa sa bagong salta. May alaga siyang bata, at bukod sa pamamalengke at pagluluto ay kailangan pa niyang maglinis ng dalawang kotse at mag-alaga ng isang rabbit. Ang mas nakakainis ay malaki ang bahay ng kanyang amo, samantalang maliit lang ang kailangang linisin ng bagito, at ang alaga ay isang matanda na aktibo pa.

“Nasaan ang hustisya?” ang nasambit niya sa kanilang umpukan minsan.

Sumagot naman ang isa niyang kaibigan ng, “Magsabi ka kasi, wala kang laban kapag hindi mo ipinarating ang sa akala mo ay tama. Baka lampas pa sa $100 ang idagdag sa sahod mo,” sabi nito.

Sa muli nilang pagkikita sa kanilang day off, masayang ibinalita ni Leony na nangako ang kanyang amo na itataas ang kanyang sahod ng higit pa sa isang baguhan. “Tama ka, friend, kailangan mo lang magsalita, lalo kung patas ang pagtingin ng iyong amo. Salamat.” – George Manalansan

Saudi, Britain open doors to DH nurses; Japan next

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By Vir B. Lumicao
A Saudi military hospital is seeking 250 care assistants while Britain is in need of 40,000 nurses, opportunities that could allow hundreds of Filipino nurses-turned- helpers in Hong Kong to return to their profession.

Japan, meanwhile, could soon open its doors to Filipino caregivers, given its rapidly ageing population.

These bits of information were relayed by two recruiters from Manila who provided new career options to Filipinos nursing graduates and caregivers who attended the whole-day Nurses Forum III on Oct. 4 at the Philippine Overseas Labor Office in Admiralty Centre.

FredPalmiery of Concorde and SHARP discuss job opportunities for RNs and BSN graduates in the United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia. (Photo from Labor Attache Jalilo de la Torre).

Saudi specialist and former nurse Alma Culala from LBS Recruitment Solutions Corp and Alfredo Palmiery, an employment agency owner in Manila and president of the Society of Hong Kong Accredited Recruiters of the Philippines, took turns briefing the 207 nurse-helpers who came for the orientation.

Labor Attaché Jalilo dela Torre, who organized the forum in cooperation with the Philippine Nurses in Hong Kong, said the seminar would open the way for nurses doing domestic work in Hong Kong to return to their profession.

“I think it’s a serious deskilling problem when nurses and other women of professions leave the country for work not suited for their professional backgrounds,” Labatt Dela Torre said.

“I have nothing against domestic work. It’s a decent way of earning money, but our nurses, midwives and teachers need to take up their professions and pursue their dreams working in jobs they have studied and spent a lot of money for.

The various fora we have organized for nurses, midwives and teachers are designed to open new opportunities for them.”

This was the first time that LBS, a supplier of nurses, paramedical and support staff to 16 government hospitals in Saudi Arabia and a private hospital in Brunei, came to Hong Kong to recruit staff for a Saudi hospital, said Culala.

“We are here to give you the opportunity to go back to nursing. King Faisal Hospital in Jeddah is in need of 250 care assistants,” Culala told the 102 participants who included two males.

She said BS Nursing graduates not younger than 22 years but not older than 44 are needed for the position, whether with experience or not. 

Practical nursing graduates without experience are also accepted, Culala said.

The recruiter offered a tax-free salary of Php32,000 to Php33,000 a month, air tickets, free board and lodging, yearly paid vacation of 40 days. The only cost for applicants is the Php12,000 medical checkup fee refundable upon arrival in Jeddah.

Culala told The SUN the care assistants would get three days off a week but would have longer work days as they will be required to be on duty for 48 hours a week.

Palmiery, meanwhile, said British hospitals prefer Filipino nurses to other Asians because of their English proficiency, neatness and caring service.
He said the three- to five-year contract pays a starting salary of £22,128 a year, equivalent to Php1.5 million at the current exchange rate, but it’s not tax-free and the worker will have to rent her own room after three months.

He warned that Britain requires applicants to be very proficient in English, as they will have to score no less than 7.0 in the language testing system for migrants who want to work in that country.

He said interested OFWs should first enroll in an IELTS review class before taking the test.

Applicants could enroll in online IELTS review classes, but the fee is a bit steep at about US$390 for a 40-hour course. The IELTS English proficiency test evaluates a candidate’s reading, writing, listening and skilling (understanding) skills.

Japan is also a potential market for caregivers given the long life expectancy of its citizens, but it requires foreign workers to be able to speak and understand Nihongo, Palmiery said.

The audience cheered when Palmiery said he would set up a Nihongo school in Hong Kong so that OFWs who plan to apply for caregiver positions in Japan do not have to go home and enroll in language schools there.

He said he is just waiting for the signing of a bilateral agreement between the Philippines and Japan that would open this new opportunity for Filipino caregivers.

Second autopsy rules out foul play in Pinay’s fatal fall in Shenzhen

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Lorain Asuncion
By Vir B. Lumicao

A forensics report on the comprehensive second autopsy on the remains of a Filipina maid who died in a fall from a residential tower in Shenzhen in July suggested no foul play, supporting a similar finding by the police on the mainland.

Relatives of the deceased expressed hope the findings would not adversely affect Hong Kong police investigation of the maid’s employers in connection with the tragedy.

The autopsy findings by the Center of Forensic Science Guangdong Medical University indicated the deceased, Lorain Escorial Asuncion, 28 and single, died from multiple organ injury and massive blood loss.

The findings appeared to support an earlier conclusion by the Shenzhen Public Security Bureau that the Filipina died from falling.

The English translation of the five-page forensic report was handed by the Department of Foreign Affairs to Jenevieve A. Javier, the elder sibling of Asuncion, on Oct 13. 

Javier said a DFA officer who turned over the findings said Asuncion’s remains might be released and repatriated before the end of October.

Sana lumabas ang katotohanan…ang sa amin lang, magbigay sila ng ebidensiya na ginawa talaga niya yung sinasabi ng amo na nag-commit siya ng suicide,” Javier told The SUN in an online message.

The report said that while Asuncion’s face was intact with no deformity of the skull and face, her chest had collapsed and was deformed with several broken ribs that pierced her left lung, causing it to rupture and bleed. Her upper left arm also broke and her right foot was deformed, possibly on impact.

The report also said that no foreign matter was found in her uterine cavity, indicating no sexual assault.

An initial Shenzhen police autopsy of the victim’s body in August also ruled out foul play and classified Asuncion’s case as “death by falling”.

But her relatives doubted the initial report because Asuncion’s face was intact, which they thought was inconsistent with her having fallen from the 22nd storey flat of her female employer’s father in Longgang District.

The Filipina had traveled to Shenzhen on July 22 this year on her employers’ instructions to join them in their summer vacation there. But when she got there, her employers Gu Huaiyi, his wife Ms Liu their children had gone to other parts of China and the helper was forced to stay in the house Liu Heping, her employer’s father.

The next morning, the elder Liu called the police to report that the Filipina had gone missing but her belongings were in his flat. A day later, Liu again called the police to say he had found Asuncion’s body in the garden below his flat.

The maid’s employers were arrested by Hong Kong police in August and were being investigated allegedly for violation of immigration rules in connection with taking their helper to work across the border.

They were released on police bail but were due to report to the police headquarters any day now for further investigation. 

Sources at the Consulate told The SUN Hong Kong investigators were also awaiting the result of the second autopsy.  

HK Filcom supports divorce in PHL

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Members of the Committee on Population and Family Relations listen to the views of Filipinos in Hong Kong.

By Daisy CL Mandap

It’s been a long time coming.

This was the overwhelming response from Filipino community leaders in Hong Kong, as they expressed support for a divorce law during a public hearing conducted by the Philippine House of Representatives at the Consulate on Oct. 1.

Of about a dozen leaders who spoke at the hearing led by Rep. Sol Aragones, chair of the Committee on Population and Family Relations, only two spoke out against allowing divorce.

Everyone else, from those representing militant organizations like Unifil-Migrante HK to non government organizations Mission for Migrant Workers, sectoral groups like Hong Kong Musicians Union, and media companies like The SUN, openly supported a divorce law.

Joining Aragones at the public hearing were House deputy speakers Pia Cayetano and Raneo Abu, committee vice chairperson Ma. Lourdes R. Aggabao, and representatives Teddy Baguilat, Jr., Emmi de Jesus and Aniceto Bertiz III.

Consul General Bernardita Catalla expressed gratitude that the first public consultation on divorce outside of the Philippines, was held in Hong Kong.

“Ibig sabihin ay binibigyan tayo ng importansiya ng ating gobyerno, lalo na sa napaka importanteng issue na ito, lalong lalo na sa mga OFWs, lalo na sa Hong Kong,” she said.

Congen Catalla said there’s a growing number of overseas Filipino workers in Hong Kong who are seeking an annulment of their marriage. For the past two years at least, she said between three and five OFWs submit documents for notarization by the Consulate, to support such applications.

Another indication was that the legal issues often brought up by OFWs during outreach consultations in Hong Kong by lawyers of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines pertain to annulment, legal separation, property dissolution and custody over children.

Seven House bills were presented to the Filipino community for consideration, but only two provided for absolute divorce.

The first, authored by Rep. Edcel C. Lagman, proposed adopting the current grounds for legal separation under art 55, and annulment of marriage under art 45 of the Family Code, as grounds for absolute divorce.

His bill also points out that the Philippines has a long history of divorce, and it was outlawed only in 1950 when the Family Code was introduced.

The other divorce bill filed jointly by Gabriela representatives Emmi de Jesus and Arlene Brosas is more liberal, in that it also allows for a no-fault divorce, when the spouses have been legally separated for at least five years.

This writer said in her submission that the Gabriela bill appeared to be the best solution to ending a marriage without much difficulty and expense, as it avoids the ticklish question of ascertaining who between the spouses is at fault.

However, a three-year separation instead of five might be enough for a married couple to know if they really want out of their union.

This author also called for having a divorce law that is inexpensive and fast, to better serve OFWs who are hard-pressed for money, and do not have a lot of time to spend attending court hearings and talking to lawyers.

Cynthia Abdon, who represented the Mission for Migrant Workers, attested to the big number of OFWs with family problems. Of the 2,000 cases referred to them each year, she said between 8 and 10% pertain to family relationships.

She also spoke of women OFWs who are forced to endure years of abuse or infidelity because divorce is out of their reach.

“This is an issue dear to women migrants as it seriously affects their ability to be productive members of society. This is an issue that will instill in women migrants that there is hope after a terrible marriage. This an issue that will uphold what is just and right,” she said.

The most vocal opposition to divorce came from the representative of Chaplaincy for Filipinos in
Hong Kong. 

She said divorce would encourage couples to be lax in their commitment to their marriage, that it would lead to abuses, especially of women, and it would encourage infidelity and affect the emotional and moral formation of the children.

At the end of the three-hour hearing, Rep. Cayetano said they will consider conducting another public consultation overseas to have a better idea of what overseas Filipinos think about divorce.

‘Coins for Bethune’ drive raises a record $56,000

Posted on 13 October 2017 No comments
This year’s “Coins for Bethune” fundraising project for the Bethune House Migrant Women’s Refuge has made more than $56,000 so far, with the amount set to increase as some 10 collection receptacles are still to be returned.

The amount collected in less than three months since the fundraiser was launched appears to be a record, as the highest collection to date was set in 2011, the year the campaign was launched, with about $50,000 being raised.

Donations cans were distributed last June 4, and collected during Bethune House’s 31st anniversary celebration on Sept. 17 at Chater Road.

Edwina Antonio, executive director of Bethune House, thanked supporters of “Coins for Bethune” for their generosity and continued patronage of the two shelters operated by the NGO Mission for Migrant Workers.


Participants in the fund-raising drive turn over their cans of coins to Bethune House.
“We are so happy! We raised more than $56,000 from the cans and individual donations! The funds will help support the regular programs of Bethune House. It takes a community to shelter migrants in need,” Antonio said in a Facebook post.

In a speech at the shelter’s anniversary cocktails and fundraising event at KUC Space in Jordan on Sept 30, she said Bethune House “has tirelessly pursued creative ways to secure funding for its many initiatives,” foremost of which is providing shelter to distressed migrant women workers.

She said Bethune House’s shelters had been fully occupied these past few weeks as the number of domestic workers pursuing labor and other cases after being terminated had risen.

“Shelter is still a primary need because of the continuous increase in the number of terminations and contract violations as well as violence against domestic workers,” Antonio said.

“Increasing the capacity of the shelter to attend to needs contribute to the empowerment of the residents as well as in strengthening their capacity to cope with their cases and issues that affect their situations in Hong Kong,” she added. – Vir B. Lumicao

Ex-labatt Julve feted in HK on retirement

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A select group of friends of the Philippines’ former attaché to Hong Kong Bernardino Julve gathered on Oct 7 at The Port in Lan Kwai Fong, Central, for a post-birthday and retirement celebration in his honor.

Julve, who retired as a commissioner of the National Labour Relations Commission on reaching the age of 65 last month, thanked all the guests and reminisced how Hong Kong provided him with his most rewarding experience as a labor envoy.

Among those who came were current Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre and the honoree’s friends from the militant migrants sector, media, charitable organizations, the media, and close family members.

Julve recalled how he risked being declared persona non grata in the city, along with the late Ambassador Domingo Lucenario, Jr. (who was then deputy consul general in Hong Kong) when they joined a rally to protest against a cut in the salary of migrant workers here.

Former Labor Attache Bernardino Julve returned to Hong Kong recently to celebrate with friends and family his 65th birthday and to mark his retirement from government service. Speakers took their turns giving tribute to his being accommodating when he was labatt. The party was held at the Port, a Filipino-owned restobar in Lan Kwai Fong. 
He also expressed gratitude for the many friends he made during his record six-year stint in Hong Kong, noting they came from all walks of life and profession.

A pivotal moment in his stay was his undergoing liver transplant at Queen Mary Hospital, when he hovered between life and death as family and friends prayed for his recovery.

Julve first served abroad in Rome, before moving to Hong Kong.

After a mandatory recall to the Department of Labor and Employment’s head office in Manila, he was posted in British Columbia in Canada where he stayed for six years.

He returned briefly to DoLE in 2014 before being appointed as NLRC Commissioner.
Julve shuttles between Manila and Hong Kong, where he has acquired permanent residency.- DCLM

Foreign investments down

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The Philippine economy is beginning to suffer the adverse effects of the Duterte administration’s policies.

During a Senate hearing last week on the 2018 proposed budget of the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda), Senator Franklin Drilon expressed concerns over “a significant deceleration in the influx of new investments” or equity placements.

This prompted the Neda to issue a statement on October 10, claiming that foreign investors remained confident in doing business in the Philippines, a view echoed by Presidential Adviser on Entrepreneurship Jose Ma. Concepcion 3rd.

But on the same day, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported that net foreign direct investments (FDI) slumped to their lowest level in over a year in July on the back of a steep drop in funds channeled into debt instruments.

At $307 million, the net inflow for the month was 37.9 percent lower compared to July last year and was also the smallest since June 2016’s $238 million.

The Bangko Sentral said this was mainly on account of a 74.3-percent decline in investments in debt instruments, to $105 million from $407 million, which outweighed a more than five-fold increase in net equity capital.

Net equity capital, at $131 million in July, was 470 percent higher compared to the $23 million posted a year earlier. Equity capital placements totaled $170 million, outpacing the $39 million in withdrawals during the month.

The bulk of inflows came from Singapore, the United States, the Netherlands, Japan and Taiwan, the central bank said.

The funds were channeled primarily into manufacturing; real estate; wholesale and retail trade; finance and insurance; and electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply activities.

Reinvested earnings, meanwhile, grew by 11.5 percent to $71 million.

July’s slump weighed on net FDI flows for the first seven months of 2017, which fell by 16.5 percent year on year to $3.9 billion. The Bangko Sentral said this was due to an 81.5-percent decline in net equity capital to $272 million.

Placements during the period came mostly from Singapore, the United States, Japan, Hong Kong and the Netherlands.

Net placements in debt instruments expanded by 13.9 percent to $3.14 billion from $2.76 billion.

Reinvested earnings reached $487 million, up 9.3 percent.

The Bangko Sentral raised its 2017 net FDI forecast to $8 billion in June, from $7 billion previously, citing improved domestic indicators and expected global uptick.

Duterte’s economic managers are pushing for the approval of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) bill as a crucial component of the government’s massive infrastructure program, “Build Build Build.”

Cabinet officials have also been drumming up investor interest via briefings overseas, with the next leg to be held in New York with Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno and Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III in attendance.

Pinay saved after filming herself drinking bleach

Posted on 10 October 2017 No comments
By The SUN staff

Ann posted this picture on FB before filming
herself drinking the bleach
A Filipina domestic helper who has apparently overstayed her visa in Hong Kong reportedly tried to kill herself by gulping down a gallon of bleach on Oct. 10, and even recorded her act on video.

Reports from her friends said Ann A. was taken to a hospital in the New Territories shortly after her suicide bid at about 1pm, but as of this writing, no one could say for sure where she was.

About four hours after she sent the video of her downing the bleach to a friend, this message appeared on Ann's Facebook account: OK lang ako, wag kayo mag-alala,” the post read.

Later, Ann said in her native Ilonggo dialect that she was so depressed that she seemed to have lost her mind.
Thank you gid sa kabalaka ninyo. May second life pa ako,” (Thanks for all your concern. I got a new lease on life”), she added.

Ann, a mother of three young girls and a native of Cabatuan, Iloilo, videoed herself gulping down the bleach, her mouth frothing from the liquid that flowed down her chin.

She sent the video to a neighbor friend, who then shared it in a group chat, until it reached the RMN radio station in Iloilo, which posted a blurred copy on its Facebook page. .

A caption story that accompanied the posted video said Ann had a spat with her husband last Sunday, making her decide to end her life.

One of her fellow Ilonggos who contacted the assistance to nationals section of the Consulate reported that Ann’s last contract ended in June this year.


She appears not to have submitted a new contract, suggesting she has been staying in Hong Kong illegally since.
Ann is reportedly staying at a boarding house in Kamtin, Yuen Long.

Ethnic minorities in Hong Kong rally for equality

Posted on 09 October 2017 No comments
by The SUN team
Children were among the protesters who called for equality. Photo by Danilo Reyes


 A group of ethnic minority residents, along with some local supporters, staged a protest yesterday, Oct. 8, to call for the elimination of “long-standing inequality” in Hong Kong’s education, employment and medical services.
The protesters, who included children, marched to the Central Government Offices in Tamar to urge Chief Executive Carrie Lam to help improve their plight.
They presented a petition which listed a 14-point demand, including fair admission in kindergartens, better Chinese language support for EM students in local schools, and de-segration in the public school system.
The rally was held ahead of the maiden policy speech of Hong Kong’s top official on Wednesday, Oct. 11.
Government statistics from last year showed that 8,056 children from the Philippines, Indonesia, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Thailand and other parts of Asia – excluding China and Japan – were in primary schools.
Equality in education was a major concern. Photo by Danilo Reyes
The number dropped to 3,493 in high schools and 2,313 in tertiary institutions, accounting from just 30 percent of Hong Kong’s young people aged 15 to 24 from the listed countries.
In contrast, more than 73 percent of Chinese youth in this age group were in high schools and tertiary institutions.
Outside the government’s  headquarters, the protesters shouted “We love Hong Kong, we are Hongkongers, we are Hong Kong’s future” in both English and Cantonese.
They said that because EM kids struggle to speak Chinese, they encounter difficulty in getting into good schools or obtaining better paying jobs, as many employers require job applicants to have attained a certain level of proficiency in Cantonese or Mandarin.
Some of the protesters said that even getting accepted into a kindergarten is difficult because young non-locals do not speak Chinese. The language problem continues as they try to get a place in prestigious elementary or secondary schools, or university.
Local supporters of the group said there is also a need to provide support for EMs who need medical care, or jobs.
Public hospitals should employ interpreters to prevent EMs being excluded from public health care because of the language barriers, while the Labour Department should have staff who will assist EMs in securing a job.
In response, the government through the Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau, said it will continue working with the Equal Opportunities Commission in building a “pluralistic and inclusive society which is free from discrimination”.



‘Cheerful’ Rose is home for good

Posted on 08 October 2017 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Happy is the word that first comes to mind when one meets Rosalinda Pineda, a longtime leader of the Filipino Catholic Group at St Joseph’s church in Central. No matter the task at hand, no matter who she was working with, Pineda, who is “Mommy Rose” to most of her younger church mates, seemed to be always cheerful and calmly in command.

Rose Pineda with Father Midas in one of the church gatherings.

Now the ray of sunshine that lit up many a Sunday at St Joseph’s has shifted its glow farther afield, in Iloilo to be more precise, because that’s where 61-year-old Pineda has moved since Sept. 17 this year.

After working with just three employers in the 30-odd years that she was in Hong Kong, Pineda decided it was time to go back home, to be with her two children and four grandchildren.

But rest is still far from her mind, as she gladly shared that she was offered to run a school canteen near her home. This new project draws her back to one of her lifelong passions – cooking – and she cannot feel any happier.

“Ito talaga ang gusto kong gawin,” she told this writer a day before saying her final goodbye to the place she had called home for three decades.

For now, though, she is happy enough to just take it easy and enjoy the fruit of the hard work she did, albeit cheerfully, all those years.

“As of now pahinga muna, mag-enjoy sa bonding sa mga apo,” she said in response to a follow-up message on how she has been doing since settling back home.

She has reasons to feel good. Her two children whom she raised single-handedly after becoming widowed at age 30 are both doing well in their chosen professions, and Pineda herself has saved enough to be financially comfortable in her retirement.

Seeing her now, one could hardly guess that her first years abroad were fraught with heartaches.

Soon after she came to Hong Kong to work for a relative, her husband who was working as a security guard, was stabbed to death by a drug-crazed junkie back in their hometown. That left Pineda having to choose between going back home to raise her two kids, or staying put in Hong Kong so she could earn enough to provide for their needs.

Her dilemma deepened when a rich relative offered to adopt her kids. Pineda was torn between the idea of letting go of her kids so they could have a better future, or keeping them with her, despite the difficulties she was forced to deal with in the wake of her husband’s death.

What she did was to ask her young children to make their own sacrifices so they could stay together. The two kids stayed on in their house and did all the chores, and were just joined by a sister of Pineda during the night.

Another test came in the form of an offer from a relative to introduce Pineda to male friends online, thinking it was time she dated again. This time Pineda said she turned to one of the priest friends at St Joseph’s for advice, and was told to just concentrate on raising her kids.

She complied, and now says it was one of the best decisions she has ever made.

After a rough first contract in Hong Kong during which she said she was paid only $700, about half the prescribed monthly salary then, Pineda looked for a new employer. Her luck turned when she was hired by a kindly French couple.

At a time when calling long distance cost a lot of money, Pineda said her French employer let her use their telephone to keep in touch with her children regularly, without charge. Her employers also took her along with them when they’d go to France on extended vacation. But after 10 years, the family had to move back to their home country and Pineda had to look for another employer.

Pineda still remembers the time 16 years ago when was interviewed by the Irish man who would become her next employer. She recalled with a smile that she was the 30-odd applicant to be called, not so much for an interview, but for an oral test and a practicum. She was made to demonstrate her table setting skills and ability to craft a menu for a dinner party, both of which she passed handily because she took pains to learn them on her own while working for her previous employers.

The contract with her Irish-Filipino employers was to be renewed seven more times, with  Pineda going along with them and their beloved pet dogs, as they moved from one lavish house to another over the years. With the advent of social media, she took to posting the culinary creations she served to her employers and their guests, not to brag or whine, but to take delight in what she managed to whip up each time.

But it was not just cooking she did with passion, but every chore that came with the job. She shared that one of her last “bilins” to her employer Harry, was to make sure his next help would iron his shirts thoroughly from the inside and just skim them off on the outside so they don’t lose their sheen. She also proudly proclaimed that she does a lot of hand-washing because it helps keep the shape and color of clothes.

“See this shirt that I am wearing? I bought it years ago for just $10, pero mukha pa ring bago,” she said, obviously pleased with herself.

It is another trait that endears Pineda to many. Despite the opulent lifestyle she was exposed to in the last 26 years of her stay in Hong Kong, Pineda remained the simple Ilonggo woman she was when she first arrived. She dressed as simply and as frugally as before, and never took on the ostentatious airs of many of her peers who thrive on reflected luxury from their employers.

This mindset helped her focus on what she worked abroad for: provide for the basic needs of her children, and save enough for the inevitable return home.

She also had the foresight to put money in an insurance plan that by the time she was ready to cash in on her investment before returning home, she managed to collect a tidy sum that surprised even her employer.

“I told Harry that part of my medical bills was paid for by this insurance; yung kulang lang yung sinisingil ko sa kanya,” said Pineda.

Loans, which blight many an OFW’s life in Hong Kong, was not in her radar, as she made sure she always had something set aside for emergencies. Spending much of her time in church also helped her stay on the straight and narrow, Pineda said.

She did manage to stray far enough, though, to join two related organizations, the cancer support group Buhay Ka, and Filcomsin, made up of many of her long-time friends in the community.

Pineda could have gone further afield, and become the community leader who could rightfully lecture to her fellow migrant workers on how to make the most of their stay abroad. But she did not, preferring instead to leave as quietly as she had lived in Hong Kong for three decades.

For Pineda, there was simply no reason to veer off the path that kept her fulfilled – and more importantly, happy.


May panlaban ang Pilipinas sa Oscars

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Napili ng Film Academy of the Philippines ang independent film na “Birdshot” bilang official entry ng Pilipinas sa Best Foreign Language sa Oscars na gaganapin sa March, 2018.

Nauna rito, nanalong best picture ang Birdshot sa Asian Future Film section ng 2016 Tokyo International Film Festival, at nanalo rin Critic’s Choice awards sa nakaraang Pista ng Pelikulang Pilipino (PPP).

Pinangungunahan nina John Arcilla, Arnold Reyes, Mary Joy Apostol at Manuel Aquino, ang Birdshot ay mula sa direksyon ng 24- taong gulang na si Mikhail Red. Ito ay co- produced ng indie film company na TBA Studios, na nag-produce din ng Heneral Luna, na naging entry ng Pilipinas sa Oscars noong 2015.

CAMILLE NAGANAK NA
Isinilang ni Camille Prats ang pangalawa niyang anak, isang malusog na baby girl noong Sept. 22 sa St Luke’s Medical Center sa Bonifacio Global City sa Taguig City. Pinangalanang Nala Camilla, ito ay panganay nilang anak ni VJ Yambao.
Ang caption sa mga litratong inilabas ni Camille:  “Your much awaited arrival has finally come. World, meet our princess, Nala Camilla Prats Yambao. Born on September 22, 2017 at 8:36pm, 7.3lbs. Thank you God for the gift of life and for being my comforter all throughout my birthing journey. My Love, thanks for being with me every step of the way. Seeing how happy and elated you are upon seeing our baby girl is priceless. I will forever embed that memory in my heart.
Finally you are in our arms baby girl”.
Bukod kay VJ at Nathan, ang panganay ni Camille sa namayapang asawa niyang si Anthony Linsangan, dumalaw din ang kuya ni Camille na si John Prats, kasama ang asawang si Isabel Oli at kanilang anak na si Feather Lily.
Samantala, tatay na rin si Geoff Eigenmann nang isilang ng kanyang girlfriend na si Maya (Angeli Mae Flores ang tunay na pangalan) ang kanilang baby girl  noong Sept. 23.
Agad na nag-post si Gina Alajar sa kanyang IG account “Maraming maraming salamat, Panginoong Diyos sa ibinigay mong kaligtasan kay Maya at sa aking bagong apong si Arabella Simone Eigenmann. Congratulations, Geoff and Maya. 9-23-2017, this is the day that the Lord has made!!

SARAH AT RICHARD, MAGKAKA-BABY ULIT
Masayang ibinalita nina Richard Gutierrez at Sarah Lahbati na masusundan na ang panganay nilang anak na si Zion, 4. Sa Instagram account ni Sarah, ipinost niya ang larawan nila nina Richard at Zion, na may caption na: We are thrilled to announce that our little family is growing. Zion is about to be a kuya!!!!! So excited for the future. Lord, thank you for protecting us. I’m very much pregnant... back pains, breakouts, HAKAW DIM SUM CRAVINGS, cramps, mood swings, ANNOYANCE AT IBA PA!!! Raise your hand if you can relate!!! Shoutout to all the super moms out there. The silver lining to this craziness is that there’s a healthy baby growing inside of me who I’m very much excited to meet next year. :) Do you think we’re having a boy or girl?
Ang caption naman ni Richard: “Thank you to my love (Sarah Lahbati) for staying strong and patient despite my hectic schedule, she’s able to take care of me, Zion and our little one on the way, she’s truly a super mom”.
Noong August 1 ay ipinahayag nina Richard at Sarah ang kanilang engagement sa kanilang show na “It Takes Gutz To Be a Gutierrez”, pero wala pang binanggit na petsa ng kanilang kasal.
Samantala, maliban kay Sarah, buntis din ang mga sumusunod: Nikki Gil, Pokwang, Isabelle Daza, Bangs Garcia, Pauleen Luna-Sotto, Kaye Abad, Maricar de Mesa, LJ Moreno – Alapag, Nikka Garcia (asawa ni Patrick Garcia), Karel Marquez, Regine Angeles, Alyanna Martinez (anak ni Albert Martinez), Erika Padilla at Michelle Madrigal.

LUIS, MAN OF HONOR SA KASAL NI ANNE
Matagal nang magkaibigan sina Luis Manzano at Anne Curtis mula nang teenagers pa sila, at napabalita pang niligawan noon ni Luis si Anne. Hindi man sila naging magkasintahan, naging mabuting magkaibigan naman sila. Ayon kay Luis, nagkasundo na sila noon na magiging abay ang bawat isa sa kanila kapag ikinasal sila.
Kamakailan ay nakatanggap na raw ng sulat si Luis mula kay Anne na nagsasaad na “may promise tayo sa isa’t isa, and would you be my man of honor sa kasal ko?” Ikakasal si Anne kay Erwan Heussaff sa taong ito, at bukod kay Luis, siguradong nasa wedding entourage din ang kapatid ni Anne na si Jasmine Curtis-Smith, ang kapatid ni Erwan na si Solenn, at ang mga barkada nilang sina Georgina Wilson, Isabelle Daza at Raymond Gutierrez. Tiyak ding naroon si Vicki Belo, Hayden Kho at bibong anak nilang si Scarlet Snow.
Bilang pagtupad sa pangako, kapag ikinasal si Luis ay si Anne din ang kanyang magiging best woman, pero sa ngayon ay malabo pang matuloy ito bagama’t tila seryoso naman siya sa girlfriend niyang si Jessy Mendiola, 24, at matagal nang humihingi ng apo ang kanyang inang si Vilma Santos. Bata pa raw kasi si Jessy, at marami pang pwedeng gawin sa buhay. Samantala sa kanyang edad na 36 ay handang handa nang mag-asawa si Luis, lalo at financially stable na siya. Matagal na rin daw niyang pangarap ang magkaroon na rin ng sariling pamilya, gaya ng karamihan ng kanyang mga kaibigan. Sa ngayon ay abala si Luis sa kanyang bagong show na “I Can See Your Voice”.

ATOM, KAPUSO NA
Balik-Kapuso ang sikat na broadcast journalist na si Atom Araullo, at kabilang na sa News and Public Affairs team ng GMA Network. Bago siya naging Kapamilya, naging bahagi siya dati ng 24 Oras, at may sariling segment na ATOMic Sports, at noong bata pa ay napasama sa programang 5 and Up.
“I’m very excited. Ang dami kong gustong gawin, particularly in the realm of documentary production. I think this is a great place to do all of that,” ang sabi ni Atom.
Naging mainit ang pagtanggap ng GMA Network Chairman at CEO Atty. Felipe Gozon kay Atom.

Ex-DH jailed for overstaying 9 years after divorce

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By Vir B. Lumicao

A former domestic helper who missed a chance to change her immigration status when she married a Hong Kong man over a decade ago, realized her mistake only recently.

Merle dela Luna, 58 years old, was sentenced to seven months in jail by a magistrate in Shatin Court on Sept 15 for overstaying for nine years after her divorce.

“Defendant, I take into account all the facts of the case. You overstayed for a lengthy period because you were married to a Hong Kong man until you divorced in 2008,” Magistrate Winnie Lau said.

The magistrate reckoned the breach of condition of stay had been for nine years, from 2008 to the time Dela Luna was arrested on Sept 7.

She said she would have jailed the defendant for 10 and a half months, but discounted that by one-third.

The prosecution said the Filipina was arrested in North Point when police discovered during an identity check that she had remained illegally in the city.

Dela Luna pleaded guilty when she appeared in court on Sept 8, but Lau deferred sentencing for a week.

During sentencing on Sept 15, Lau adjourned the hearing for about half an hour after the defense lawyer said his client had disclosed she had been married to a Hong Kong man, a fact that could have an impact on the sentence.

The court heard that the woman came to Hong Kong in 2005 and worked as a domestic helper until June 2007.

She later met the local man who became her husband, but she did not bother to apply for a change of her immigration status by virtue of her marriage.

Satisfying flavors of comfort food

Posted on No comments
By Jo Campos

There is nothing like home-cooked meals. The personal touch of our mother’s favorite recipes, homegrown ingredients and the aroma of herbs and spices filling the entire kitchen is simply a feel-good everyday experience.

Wikipedia’s definition of the term ”comfort food” has been traced back to at least 1966, when the The Palm Beach Post used it in a story: “Adults, when under severe emotional stress, turn to what could be called ‘comfort food’—food associated with the security of childhood, like mother’s poached eggs or famous chicken soup.

In the Philippines, Nanay’s kare-kare or pinakbet, sinigang and caldereta, to name a few, are considered as comfort food. They are seen to soothe frayed nerves, obliterate negative feelings, and provide a great coping mechanism for those who are under stress.

The identification of particular items as comfort food may be idiosyncratic, though there are detectable patterns. In one study of American preferences, “males preferred warm, hearty, meal-related comfort foods, such as steak, casseroles, and soup”. On the other hand, females and younger people, or those below 55 years of age, preferred snack-related treats, such as chocolate and ice cream.

The study also revealed strong connections between consumption of comfort foods and feelings of guilt. An article, “The Myth of Comfort Food” asserted that men tend to choose these types of savory comfort foods because they remind them of being “pampered” or spoiled, while women choose snack-related foods because they are associated with low amounts of work and less “cleanup.” It also suggested that women are more likely to reach for unhealthier foods in times of stress due to more weight-conscious mindsets.

Restaurants and fast food chains serving comfort foods are usually among the best sellers. It somehow brings back the nostalgic feeling of eating at home. For this issue, I am sharing some easy to make- hassle free comfort food recipes from Delish website that I have cooked, and one of the most requested dishes from my f JC The Foodie Catering Services: beef caldereta.

But wait, there’s more! Starting this issue, I am inserting JC The Foodie quotes for inspiration and good vibes.

“This is my advice to people: Learn how to cook, try new recipes, learn from your mistakes, be fearless, and above all have fun”-Julia Child


Fettuccine Alfredo
Ingredients:
lb. fettuccine
kosher salt
1/2 c. butter
1/2 c. heavy cream
1/2 c. freshly grated parmesan, plus more for sprinkling
Freshly ground black pepper
2 tbsp. chopped parsley

Procedure:
1. In a large pot of boiling salted water, cook pasta according to package instructions. Reserve about 1 cup of pasta water then drain.
2. Meanwhile, in a large skillet over medium heat, add cream and butter. Cook until the butter is melted and the cream is heated through. Whisk in parmesan and season with salt and pepper. If the sauce is too thick, add reserved pasta water, 1 tablespoon at a time. Remove from heat.
3. Add cooked pasta and toss until coated in sauce. Garnish with parsley and serve immediately.

Salisbury Steak
Ingredients:
For the patties:
1 lb. ground beef
1 large egg
1/3 cup bread crumbs
1 tbsp. ketchup
1 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 garlic clove, minced
kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil

For the gravy
2 tbsp. unsalted butter
1 onion, chopped
2 sprigs thyme
1/2 c. mushrooms, thinly sliced
2 tbsp. all-purpose flour
1 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 tbsp. tomato paste
1 c. beef stock
kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper

Procedure:
1. Make patties: In a large bowl, combine beef, egg, bread crumbs, ketchup, Worcestershire sauce and garlic. Season with salt and pepper and form into 4 oval patties.
2. In a large skillet over medium heat, heat oil. Sear both sides of the patties until a crust forms, about 5 minutes per side. Remove onto a plate.
3. Make gravy: Wipe out skillet and add butter. Add onions and thyme and stir until onion becomes translucent. Add mushrooms and cook until browned and tender, about 4 minutes. Sprinkle onions and mushrooms with flour, and stir until they are fully coated. Cook another 2 minutes, then add Worcestershire sauce, tomato paste, and beef stock. Stir to combine and season with salt and pepper.
4. Bring the gravy to a simmer and return the patties to the skillet. Cover and cook for 10 to 15 more minutes, until the patties are done and the sauce has thickened. Plate the patties and top with more gravy. Serve.

Beef Caldereta
Ingredients:
1 kilo beef brisket
carrots, cut into cubes
potatoes, cut into cubes
red and green bell peppers, sliced
green peas
black olives
2 onions, chopped
garlic, crushed
2 tbsp. paprika
2 tbsp. chili powder
bay leaves
salt and pepper
chopped tomatoes in can
Worcestershire sauce
3 tbsp. soy sauce
fresh or dried thyme
1 small can liver spread or pate

Procedure:
1. Cut beef brisket into cubes.
2. In a large Ziploc bag, combine paprika, salt and pepper, chili powder, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, ½ of the chopped onion and garlic, some chopped bell peppers and a piece of bay leaf.
3. Add the beef brisket to the mixture in the plastic bag and rub well to cover the meat. Seal the bag and leave to marinate for a few hours or preferably overnight.
4. Lightly fry potatoes and carrots, set aside.
5. In a large pan, sauté onion and garlic, add marinated beef and cook till brown. Add chopped tomatoes, thyme and bay leaf. Adjust seasoning by adding more paprika, chili powder accordingly. Stir in liver spread.
6. Add enough water to cover the meat and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to simmer till the meat is tender.
7. Add olives, carrots and potatoes, then continue to simmer until the sauce is reduced and has thickened slightly.
8. Add green peas and bell peppers; then stir all ingredients together.
9. Serve hot.
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