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No walk-ins, no pick-ups for passport applicants as PCG tightens crowd control

Posted on 23 April 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Social distancing set-up for passport applicants at the Philippine Consulate

Since it reopened on Apr 19 after a long Easter break, the Consulate has implemented its own social distancing measures in line with the Hong Kong government’s campaign to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

The most obvious change is the placement of customized benches in front of the service counters for passport applicants who need to have their pictures taken. The applicant now sits about a meter away from the counters where the staff shoots with the camera and encodes the applicant’s personal data.

Before this, the applicants needed to go inside the office beyond the counters to have their passport application processed by a staff member sitting at the same table.
Two further enhancements have been put in place in relation to passport applications.

The first, according to Consul General Raly Tejada, is that “all passport appointments will now be online, email and phone – absolutely no walk ins.”

This is meant to reduce the number of people congregating near the counters and assures applicants that they will get their passport application processed on the indicated day.
 
Congen Tejada says there will be no more walk-ins and pick-ups for passport applicants
The second, which Congen Tejada says will likely be put in place middle of next month, is to use Hong Kong Post’s “efficient and reliable service” to send the new passport directly to the applicant’s home address.

Told that some migrant workers are not given access to their employers’ mailbox, he said the Consulate will ask employers to allow their helpers to accept the delivery as they will have to personally sign a receipt for it.

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Congen Tejada said sending the passport directly to the applicant will save time and effort, as all they have to do is buy a prepaid envelope from HK Post amounting to $32.

“The main reason is to help the applicant avoid making another trip to the Consulate just to pick up, and in compliance na din with the prescribed social distancing rules,” he said.

Often, the passport office in Manila is able to send the document earlier than the prescribed six weeks, which means the applicants will also get it a lot more quickly than if they waited until the date indicated on their receipts to pick it up at the Consulates.
 
Passport applicants will be asked to buy this mailing envelope by mid-May 
Over at the Philippine Overseas Labor Office, the most sought-after service by migrant workers of having their money claims against their employers calculated is also now being done only online.
But apart from these measures, the Consulate cannot do much more to reduce the number of people inside its premises in the five days that it is open to the public.

Many Filipinos still need to go to them personally to ask for help for all sorts of personal, legal, or work-related problems. Others go to them to process new employment contracts, or transact with attached agencies like SSS and Pag-IBIG.

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Congen Tejada says closing down the Consulate as what’s been done in many countries all over the world where there is a lockdown is out of the question.

First, Hong Kong has never shut government offices providing essential services, like the Labour and Immigration Departments.

More importantly, he says: “We need to stay open kasi kailangan tayo ng mga kababayan natin. Kung wala silang matakbuhan, paano na?”









Arriving OFWs in Phl to undergo rapid virus test, forced quarantine

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

All OFWs arriving in Manila will now be tested for Covid-19 and put in quarantine facilities

The Philippine government is to start subjecting all arriving overseas Filipino workers to rapid testing for Covid-19, in addition to putting them in a mandatory quarantine facility for 14 days.

This was announced by the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) on Emerging Infectious Diseases yesterday, Apr 22.

IATF spokesman and Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles said the regulations are part of Resolution 26 recently approved by the government’s anti-Covid 19 policymaking body.
He did not specify a date when the rapid testing will start, which means it would be put in place immediately.

Also as part of the resolution, sea-based OFWs will be required to present a certification of a clean bill of health from the Bureau of Quarantine. The certification should come from their point of origin, and issued immediately before their departure.

Earlier, the Department of Foreign Affairs announced that effective Apr 16, all arriving OFWs, whether land-based or sea-based, would be moved to quarantine facilities for 14 days before they are allowed to make their way home.
The DFA said the move is in line with the IATF’s Resolutions No13 and 15, dated Apr 13 and 15, respectively.

Previously, arriving OFWs were picked up at the airport by shuttle buses provided by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, and dropped off at designated stops near their homes.
The service stopped on Mar 30 as the enhanced community quarantine was implemented in more parts of the country, making travel through different localities more difficult.

Online chat rooms among OFWs reveal that police and security personnel have been segregating OFWs from other arriving passengers as soon as they arrive at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport, before they are herded to vehicles that take them to designated quarantine centers.

The QC hotel room is said to be cockroach-infested
The experiences shared by the returnees vary. A crew member of a cruise ship shared pictures of a filthy hotel room in Novaliches, Quezon City where he said he was taken for his forced quarantine in an interview with a TV news channel.

But online posts by other OFWs showed the opposite, with some showing neat single-occupancy  rooms in hotels, and others sharing pictures of a private resort in Tagaytay where they said they were billeted.
 
A HK OFW says she was assigned to this single-unit hotel room and given free food

Some said that their accommodation and food was free of charge, while others claimed they were charged Php180 each day. Others said they were not given any food at all.

Apart from hotels, two passenger ferries belonging to the 2GO company are being used as quarantine facilities for hundreds of OFWs, and are now berthed at Pier 15 in Manila.
The IATF also said it will also allow cruise ships carrying Filipino crew to dock in Manila ports so they can be used as quarantine facilities, subject to guidelines to be used by relevant government authorities.

But given that much of the country is now in lockdown, with the possibility of even tighter restrictions amid the continuing rise in Covid-19 cases, the main concern of the OFWs is how they will they be able to go home after they finish their quarantine.

On top of this, a majority of those under quarantine have just lost their jobs, and now face the bigger problem of finding a new source of livelihood so they can continue providing for their families.

To date, DFA records show that 16,682 OFWs have been repatriated after losing their jobs. Most, or 13,213 of them, are seafarers.

Independent studies show up to half a million OFWs are likely end up jobless, as the pandemic continues to devastate countries around the world.

Warning of ‘invisible carriers’ as 4 new imported cases of Covid-19 reported

Posted on 22 April 2020 No comments
By The SUN

Of HK's total tally of 1,034 Covid-19 patients, only 348 are still in hospital

Hong Kong health officials today (Apr 22) reported four new cases of Covid-19, all involving returning residents from Britain, bringing the total tally to 1034.

They include a two-year-old boy who was under home quarantine and was asymptomatic when his stool sample tested positive for the virus.

The boy and his mother arrived in Hong Kong on Apr 12 after visiting relatives in Britain since Feb 3. His mother tested negative, so both were sent home to start the mandatory 14-day quarantine.

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A subsequent test of the fecal sample from the toddler showed he was infected with the virus, so he was admitted to Prince of Wales Hospital in Shatin for treatment, while his parents were put under quarantine.

The three others, two females and one male, aged 26, 52 and 69, respectively, all flew into Hong Kong from London on Apr 21, and were found to have Covid-19 after submitting saliva samples to the AsiaWord-Expo testing site.

Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection again advised the public to continue practicing social distancing because of the possibility that there are undiagnosed “invisible carriers” who could spread the virus around.
She made the remark after detailing the case of a 24-year-old medical student who returned two different results for Covid-19 tests.

The student was reportedly found to have a fever on Apr 21 as he was about to take an examination, and was sent home. He went to a private hospital where his test result came out positive, so he was sent to Queen Mary Hospital for treatment.

At QMH, he was again tested, and this time, the result was inconclusive. But a laboratory test at CHP showed he was negative so he was taken off the “preliminary positive” list.
Chuang said there were two possible explanations for this: (1) the student tested “false positive” initially; and (2) he may have been infected previously and has recovered, and the initial test showed the viral residue in his system.

This, she said, could mean there “maybe invisible transmissions in our community, that’s why we think social distancing is very important.”
 
Chuang says keeping distance is important because there may be silent carriers around

The student’s friends with whom he had meals are reportedly being interviewed to find out if they had traveled recently, or whether they had been in contact with an infected person.

The student himself had no travel history, mostly stayed at home, and did not interact with anyone who had the disease.

The last locally transmitted case was reported on Apr 19. It involved a 47-year-old ground crew of Virgin Atlantic, who ushered arriving passengers to transport links to the immigration counters.

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She had no recent travel history, and had no known contact with an infected person.

Meanwhile, 28 more patients were discharged today from 14 various public hospitals after recovering from the disease. They brought to only 338 the number of infected patients under isolation at the hospitals. 

Of these, 8 are in critical condition, while those who are in serious condition went down from 6 to 4. The death toll stands at 4.


Filipina hangs self because of money & love problems, police say

Posted on No comments
By The SUN
(Photo illustration from unsplash.com)

A 44-year-old Filipina domestic helper who was reportedly tormented by financial and love problems hanged herself in her bedroom in Yuen Long at about 9:15 pm yesterday, Apr 21.

A police spokesman said the woman was found by her 35-year-old employer hanging from the ceiling with a towel around her neck.

The employer immediately brought the helper down and removed the towel, then called the police. When paramedics arrived at the employer’s unit in Tong Fong Tsuen village, they found the victim already dead, the spokesman said.

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He said investigators found a suicide note in the room indicating the victim was unhappy because of financial and love problems.

They found nothing suspicious about her death, he added.

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Her remains have reportedly been taken to the Fushan Public Mortuary in Taiwai

Consul Paulo Saret, head of assistance to nationals section of the Consulate, expressed his regret that another Filipino worker had taken her own life at this time when the world’s attention is on the coronavirus pandemic.

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“As we’ve been saying, kapag nag-OFW ka, dapat ay handa ka to weather the storm, personal or work-related,” Saret said.     

ATN is still reportedly waiting for a police report on the case so they can extend assistance to the victim’s family.

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OFWs suffering from depression are advised to call the 24-hour multi-lingual hotline at The Samaritan Befrienders Hong Kong by dialing 2896 0000.


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