Responsive Ad Slot

Latest

Sponsored

Features

Buhay Pinay

People

Sports

Business Ideas for OFWs

Join us at Facebook!

PCG advises Filcom to avoid upcoming rally sites

Posted on 06 September 2019 No comments
Image may contain: text
More protest actions to disrupt transport services in certain areas are scheduled in the next few days by opponents of Hong Kong’s controversial extradition bill and the Filipino community should avoid these areas, the Consulate said in a statement on Sept 5.


CALL NOW!

The Consulate said it had received information about the planned rallies and advised Filcom members to stay at home as much as possible and avoid wearing black or white upper garments on those days.


Call us!

According to information, the protest actions will take place on the following dates and places:
Sept 7 – On various modes of transport to the Hong Kong International Airport
Sept 8 – From Edinburgh Place to the US Consulate
Sept 9 – Choi Yuen Estate Theatre, Sheung Shui
Sept 10 – Hong Kong Stadium, Causeway Bay
Sept 13 – Lion Rock Hill between Kowloon Tong and Tai Wai
Sept 14 – Tin Sau Road Park up to Tin Shui Wai MTR Station
        Wong Tai Sin Temple Mall
Sept 16 – Revenue Tower, Wanchai



Call now!

In case of emergency, the public may dial the PCG Hong Kong hotline, (+852)  9155 4023, the Consulate said.




Pinay wins $6k settlement from employer despite theft conviction

Posted on No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao
 
Berbana was convicted of stealing Rmb1,700 from her employer
A Filipina domestic worker who is appealing a theft conviction has agreed to settle her labour claim against her former employer for $5,951 on Sept 5.

Ana Liezel Berbana agreed to settle with Wong Ma-nger, who had accused her of stealing RMB1,700.

But Labour Tribunal Presiding Officer David Chum rejected Berbana’s attempt to also claim damages, saying she would only be entitled to this if she won her appeal against her conviction.
Berbana, 33, was arrested on Dec 21 last year after Wong accused her of stealing 17 pieces of Rmb100 banknotes from the employer’s money box. Berbana pleaded not guilty, but was convicted and sentenced to six weeks in prison on May 16.

Berbana claimed during the trial that Wong had made up the theft charge after she complained that she was using her own money to buy food for the employer’s household.
Despite her conviction, Berbana was able to pursue her claim for one month’s wage in lieu of notice, unpaid salary, annual leave, air ticket, and food and travel allowance.

She also tried to ask for damages for what she claimed was wrongful prosecution, but Chum told her to wait for the High Court ruling in her appeal.

“If your appeal is not allowed, you can’t claim damage in this case,” Chum told Berbana.
Since the helper and the employer could not agree initially on the labour claim, Chum warned that he would have to set down the case for trial if they did not settle within the day.

Wong eventually said she would agree to settle but asked the presiding officer to deduct from the settlement a certain amount for Berbana’s alleged unpaid debt. But Chum said he couldn’t do that if the amount was disputed.

The court went for a short break during which both parties agreed to settle their dispute.

Chum approved a request by Wong to make the settlement payment through the Tribunal no later than Sept 11.

     

More complaints filed vs rogue recruiter

Posted on 04 September 2019 No comments
By The SUN

OFWs were allegedly charged between $7k and $12 for fake jobs in Hong Kong and Macau

The owner of an employment agency convicted in 2015 of collecting excessive fees from a job-seeker and operating at a place not specified in its license is facing a new complaint. This time, it’s from at least two Filipino domestic workers in Hong Kong who claim to have paid the recruiter thousands of dollars for fictitious jobs for relatives.

Nancy (not her real name) told The SUN that she and a friend have filed complaints against Lennis Ebrahim, owner of the now-defunct Vicks Maid Consultant Co., for offering to place their relatives for nonexistent jobs as drivers, gardeners and other positions in Hong Kong for between $7,000 and $12,000 each. .
Ebrahim, recruiting through WHT Consultant Company, reportedly moved out of her office in Kwun Tong when it became clear that the jobs she was offering did not exist, and her applicants began chasing her for their money.

Nancy said Ebrahim employed two Filipinas who she identified as M. J.  Biscocho and N. Lumatac, who also allegedly helped entice them to pay for the fake placements. 

Nancy said she and her friend filed a complaint with the Employment Agency Administration on Jul 12. They also reported the case to the Mong Kok police, and showed their signed statements.
Nancy’s friend claimed she was asked by WHT staff Biscocho and Lumatac to pay a total of $16,000 as down payment for a waiter job for her husband, a helper job for her sister, and a factory worker position for her brother.

“As long as mag-down ka, i-forward na agad sa Pilipinas ang kontrata,” the staff allegedly promised them. 

WHT allegedly charged a processing fee of $16,000 for a driver's post, $12,000 each for the waiter and factory worker jobs,  and $7,000 for domestic worker. The balance would have to be paid when the visa was issued, the worker said.
Nancy’s friend claims she made down payments of $6,000 on Oct 1 last year for her husband, $4,000 on Nov 11 for her sister and $6,000 on Nov 18 for her brother. She was given a receipt for each payment that she made.

Nancy said she was introduced by her friend to WHT on Jan 1 this year after she told her she was looking for a gardener’s job for her husband. She paid $6,000 as down payment. 

The friend came to know about WHT in its post in a helpers’ page on Facebook. She said that as far as she knew, around 20 applicants paid either $12,000 or $16,000 for the prime jobs offered.

She said that initially Ebrahim only offered jobs in Hong Kong, but eventually she also advertised posts in Macau.

Nancy said Ebrahim and her staff talked very convincingly that one of the victims was enticed to convince her husband to quit his work in Brunei and come to Hong Kong. 

He was allegedly asked to pay $2,000 as down payment but it turned out there was no job.

When the  workers started asking for their money back, they were allegedly blocked on Facebook and their calls were rejected. They then learned the agency had moved to a room in a textile warehouse in To Kwa Wan.

Nancy said she and some victims accompanied by police went to check the address in To Kwa Wan one recent Sunday but no one was answering the bell. But shortly after they left, they got a text message from one of the Filipina staff who taunted them with: “O, nagpunta pa kayo rito, anong napala nyo?”

The license of Ebrahim’s Vicks Maid Consultant Company was cancelled by EAA on Jul 27, 2015 following its conviction for overcharging and operating in a different address.









Carrie Lam withdraws extradition bill

Posted on No comments


Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam has formally announced she was withdrawing the controversial extradition bill, which has triggered more than two months of increasingly violent protests in the city.

In a pre-recorded television statement, the embattled Lam said the 13 weeks of violent protest against the Fugitive Offenders Bill has made Hong Kong “an unfamiliar place” and “have shocked and saddened Hong Kong people.”

She rued that citizens, police and reporters had been injured in the violence and there had been chaotic scenes at the airport, in MTR stations, on blocked roads and tunnels, causing delay and inconvenience to daily life.
Lam said a small number of people are challenging the “one country, two systems” principle and national sovereignty, but violence is not the solution.

Lam raised four actions in her speech: 

“First, the Government will formally withdraw the Bill in order to fully allay public concerns. The Secretary for Security will move a motion according to the Rules of Procedure when the Legislative Council resumes.
“Second, we will fully support the work of the IPCC. In addition to the overseas experts, I have appointed two new members to the IPCC, namely Mrs Helen Yu Lai Ching-ping and Mr Paul Lam Ting-kwok, SC. I pledge that the Government will seriously follow up the recommendations made in the IPCC's report.

“Third, from this month, I and my Principal Officials will reach out to the community to start a direct dialogue. People from all walks of life, with different stances and backgrounds are invited to share their views and air their grievances. We must find ways to address the discontent in society and to look for solutions.

Call now!

“Fourth, I will invite community leaders, professionals and academics to independently examine and review society's deep-seated problems and to advise the Government on finding solutions. After more than two months of social unrest, it is obvious to many that discontentment extends far beyond the Bill. It covers political, economic and social issues, including the oft-mentioned problems relating to housing and land supply, income distribution, social justice and mobility, and opportunities for our young people, as well as how the public could be fully engaged in the Government's decision-making. We can discuss all these issues in our new dialogue platform.”

Don't Miss