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Probers of Polo’s new online system decline to meet new provider

Posted on 02 September 2019 No comments

By The SUN
Image may contain: outdoor
Probers visited the Polo office in this building and interviewed only key officers

Investigators appointed by Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III to check on a new online system for the Philippine Overseas Labor Office paid a quick visit to Hong Kong last week but did not contact the contractor who made the winning bid for the project.

This was revealed by Jaime Deverall, chief executive officer of the new systems provider, Polaris Tools Limited, who said that repeated offers to meet with the investigating team went unanswered.
"If the investigators truly intend to hear all sides, they should reach out to Polaris Tools, the winning bidders, to hear our side. Instead, it's been over a week since the investigation began and we have yet to hear anything from them despite emailing all members of the investigation team to let them know that we will comply with their investigation and are happy to give a statement,” he said in a message to The SUN.

Instead, the probe team that arrived on Aug 28 reportedly interviewed only key personnel at Polo and some employment agency operators whose names were not revealed.
Polo officer-in-charge Antonio Villafuerte confirmed the arrival of the probers but declined to give further information, saying he and other staff of the labor office have been ordered not to speak about the investigation until it is completed.

“They came, they spoke to some people and then left,” Villafuerte said. He did not identify who the DOLE probers were. 
But Deverall said the five-man team is headed by Labor Undersecretary Claro Arellano, who also reportedly did not respond to a request for a meeting.

Polaris co-owner David Bishop, who owns shares in Polaris through his social enterprise incubator Migrasia Global Solutions, Ltd., also sent a letter Dole’s legal head, Philip Paredes, who was one of those who came to Hong Kong, offering to give their side, but was ignored.

Bishop alleged in the letter that there may have been corruption involved in the way the unsigned complaint against Polaris was initiated by a group that called itself “HK Agencies Seeking for Justice”.

“We at Polaris and Migrasia welcome the investigation and are confident that it will absolve both of us and Polo of any wrongdoing,” he said.

“And while reviewing how Polaris legally and transparently vied for and won the contract in question, we also hope you will also ask questions about how the complaint was raised in the first place, who is raising the concerns, and what incentives have caused them to raise such concerns,” said Bishop.

The contract awarded to Polaris in March this year was signed on behalf of Polo by former Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre, who Bello tried to recall during his three-year term allegedly for giving favors to some employment agencies whose names were never divulged.

Dela Torre who was ordered by Bello to leave Hong Kong by July 7 and move to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, had always asserted that the move to replace him was instigated by rogue agencies that failed to get him to sign job orders for Filipinas to work as bar girls in Wanchai.

In his press release issued Aug 25, Bello said he was investigating the “haste” with which a new provider for the POLO online system was selected, and that he had formed a fact-finding team to look into the alleged improprieties.

He did not say what had prompted the investigation.

The investigators arrived in Hong Kong on the same day Dela Torre denounced in a public statement on social media the latest effort by “forces of evil” to discredit him and one of his legacy projects.

But he said he welcomed the investigation, saying he was confident it would lead to his name being cleared.

He blamed the “unfounded charges” on a “shadowy group of agencies” that had written to President Rodrigo Duterte and Bello, imputing irregularities on the awarding of the contract.

Dela Torre said the system upgrade was needed to improve POLO’s efficiency and protect it as it waged a dangerous campaign against human trafficking and illegal recruitment.

He said EmployEasy, which ran the system for 13 years, was slow to respond to requests for improvements and modifications and did no more than facilitate the contract processing of agencies.

More importantly, there appeared to be a conflict of interest in its operations, as EmployEasy also operated an online matching service for workers and employers while handling sensitive data belonging to agencies that used the system.

A group of Filipino migrant workers has started an online campaign to support Polaris and the new system, and alleged that the probe is a mere ploy by Dole to restore the “old, opaque way of doing this.”

Their statement also accuses Bello of being on a mission to discredit Dela Torre and Polaris for unclear reasons.



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Filipino bartender held for alleged burglary bid

Posted on 31 August 2019 No comments
Pila appeared in Eastern Court
A Filipino resident has been charged in Eastern Court of attempting to burgle a building on Cheung Chau Island on Aug 28.

The defendant, 28-year-old Teofilo Pila, who works as a bartender in Central, appeared before Magistrate Bina Chainrai on Aug 30.
According to the prosecution, Pila was arrested after he trespassed into a building on Hok Loo Lane in Cheung Chau, and had gone up to the second floor  with an intention to steal.

He allegedly tried to escape when somebody saw him break into a room, but he was identified by witnesses before police arrested him.
The prosecution requested an eight-week adjournment of the case for further enquiry and to wait for a fingerprint and DNA report from investigators.
Pila was refused bail but Magistrate Chainrai said he could make a bail application at the Court of First Instance. – Vir B. Lumicao


Magistrate’s helper denies stealing $1,000

Posted on No comments
Image result for HK $1,000 bill photo
The $1,000 bill was allegedly taken from a locked box


By Vir B. Lumicao

A magistrate’s Filipina domestic helper has pleaded not guilty in Eastern Court to stealing a $1,000 banknote from a locked box in her employers’ bedroom.

Lady Lynne Robinion entered her plea on Aug 30 before Magistrate Bina Chainrai, who scheduled the maid’s trial on Oct 24. The defendant was released on bail.
The prosecution said the magistrate’s wife, Joey, gave two locked boxes to a second helper in the house and asked her to put them in the bedroom. The employer also gave her the $1,000 bill to store in one of the boxes, then make sure it was locked.

Robinion was arrested by police on Jul 30 in her employers’ home on Hong Kong Island after Joey reported that the banknote which she had placed in one of two locked boxes had disappeared.
When officers checked the defendant’s mobile phone, they reportedly found out that it had been topped up with a $1,000 load.

The officers later traced the top-up load to a nearby Circle K store, where they found the missing bill allegedly used by Robinion to pay for the load.
The prosecutor said police are still examining the text messages in the seized phone.

The prosecution is set to call six witnesses, including the second Filipina maid, and the cashier at Circle K. The defense said it will not call any witness.

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Union raises alarm over day-off cancellations due to protest

Posted on 30 August 2019 No comments
By The SUN

Image may contain: one or more people and outdoor
A relatively quiet Ice House St  in Central on a protest weekend

A migrant workers’ union has expressed concern over employers using the current unrest in Hong Kong to cancel their domestic worker’s only off day in the week.

According to the Filipino Migrant Workers Union, it has received complaints from domestic workers about their employers making them stay at home during their Sunday off, telling them it is not safe to go out because of the extradition protests.

“FMWU received numerous complaints from Filipino migrant workers who were either denied their rest days, or their rest days becoming irregular and adjusted arbitrarily depending on the schedule of protest actions. These have seriously violated the rights of migrant workers to one rest day per week,” said the statement issued on Aug 28.

“It has also severely affected the migrant workers’ ability to meet and socialize with their relatives and townmates. It is also affecting the workers’ participation in their union activities and campaigns.”

The Union warned the practice is illegal and could result to serious consequences for the employer.

“Employers should be reminded that not granting rest day in a week is a violation of the employment contract and punishable by law,” said FMWU’s statement.

The statement did not indicate, however, the number of complaints it has received from workers who were denied this statutory right.

Image may contain: one or more people, sky and outdoor
Black-clad protesters passing by Chater Road, the favorite meeting place of Filipino domestic workers

Since protests began in early June this year, the biggest mass assemblies have taken place on the weekends, especially Sunday. Most of them were also held in places close to where Filipino domestic workers hang out during their rest day.

While Philippine officials in Hong Kong see no reason to stop employers canceling their domestic workers’ Sunday off, they say an alternative rest day should be given the helper, as that is what the law provides.

Either that, or pay the worker for the day she was forced to remain in her employer’s  house.

On its own, the Consulate has been warning Filipinos not to wear clothes in either black or white on Sundays, to prevent them being identified as a protester, or trouble-maker.

It has also been issuing bulletins identifying areas where mass protests are scheduled to be held so workers could avoid them.

FMWU says it respects the rights of Hong Kong people to defend their autonomy under the One Country Two Systems policy. However, employers should not take advantage of the situation by illegally forbidding their helpers to go out.

The statement further noted that the protests against the widely unpopular extradition bill proposed by the Hong Kong government have escalated over the past 12 weeks, with no end in sight for a resolution.

The FMWU is affiliated with the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions (HKCTU), the Migrants Coordinating Body and the International Migrants Alliance.

Together with these other migrant support organizations, the FMWU has been at the forefront of the campaign to protect migrant workers rights, including the right to a living wage. Recently, they called for increasing their minimum wage to $5,894 a month.



Labatt Jolly fights back at attempt to discredit him

Posted on 29 August 2019 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap


Labatt Jolly at one of the outreach missions he pioneered during his HK stint

You can never put a good man down.

This was the recurring message posted on the Facebook page of former Labor Attache to Hong Kong Jalilo dela Torre, after he denounced the latest effort by a shadowy group to discredit him and one of his legacy projects.

Dela Torre called those behind the sinister move “forces of evil” and “cowardly”.

He issued the public statement early on Aug 28, three days after Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III sent out a press release to announce a probe on what he called the “haste” with which Dela Torre had tapped a new provider for the online system of the Philippine Overseas Labor Office.
The press statement also said a fact-finding team had already been formed to look into the alleged improprieties, without identifying the source of the allegations.

Dela Torre said he welcomed the investigation, as he was confident it would lead to his name being cleared. But he minced no words when he pointed out to a “shadowy group of agencies” as the source of the unfounded charges.

He said the group had written to President Rodrigo Duterte and to Bello days before he was told to give up his Hong Kong post by July 7, to question the change in the system provider, and impute ill-will on him.

The embattled labor official said that on learning about the poison letter against him, he sent out a memo to Bello to explain his side, but “he has chosen to go to the media anyway,” he said.
 
Bello with some HK agency owners during President Duterte's visit last year

That forced him to take to social media to clear his name, said Dela Torre.

In his post, he asserted that there was really no need to conduct a public bidding for a new system provider because no money from the government was spent on the process.

But “for the sake of transparency,” he said he sent out a request of proposal to four groups, including the previous provider, EmployEasy.
All the proposals were vetted by a team from Polo and an agency representative over two months, before Polaris was chosen.

“Polaris was adjudged the clear winner because it was obviously the most superior in terms of capabilities and the data protection it offered,” said Dela Torre. He pointed out that the system’s developer is a 22-year-old magna cum laude BS Computer Science graduate of Stanford University.

The decision to upgrade the system he attributed to the need to improve POLO’s efficiency, and protect it while it waged a dangerous campaign against human trafficking and illegal recruitment.

But he also pointed out to a conflict of interest on the part of EmployEasy, which he said had operated an online matching service for workers and employers, while handling sensitive data belonging to agencies.



“If those agencies are really interested to preserve the principle of transparency, and to protect data security, they should embrace the new system because the old provider has failed to protect the private data of hundreds of thousands of workers and employers,” he said. “In fact, with its own online matching service, it could very well have compromised those data already.”

Dela Torre ended his post by saying he will not allow his name to be sullied by corrupt agencies and their allies.

“I have always served the government and our people with honesty and integrity. I will not allow my name to be tainted by baseless prejudgments and insidious innuendoes hatched by rogue agencies and their cohorts,” he said.

Many of the Filipino community leaders who “liked” his post expressed their continued support for him.
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