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Woman who first tested negative is one of 2 new Covid-19 cases

Posted on 23 May 2020 No comments
By The SUN
Both patients recently arrived from Europe

A 61-year-old woman who tested negative on arrival in Hong Kong from the Netherlands on May 14 but was found infected more than a week later was among the two new imported cases reported on Friday, May 22.

The other new case is a 15-year-old boy who returned from Britain early on Friday and did not show any symptoms.


The two brought Hong Kong's total tally to 1,066.

Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection said the infected woman sought medical help on Wednesday because of a persistent cough. She tested positive on Friday.

Earlier, she was allowed to undergo home quarantine in Cheung Sha Wan after testing negative on her arrival on May 14.

The patient reported having shortness of breath and cough on Apr 16 while visiting relatives in the Netherlands, but the symptoms eventually disappared.

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The boy lived in the United Kingdom with two others from March to May this year. He was found infected on arrival at Hong Kong airport.

Dr Chuang said authorities had distributed bottles to care home workers for their saliva samples as part of a surveillance program for Covid-19.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love.

But she said only three staff would be tested in each care home.

Also to be tested as part of the program are airport staff and patients in psychiatric wards.

Catholic churches to resume public masses on Jun 1

Posted on No comments
By The SUN 


Cardinal John Tong in his video recording announcing the resumption of masses

The Catholic Church in Hong Kong has announced today, May 22, that public masses will resume on Jun 1, Monday, in line with the government's relaxation of its public gathering measures.The first Sunday mass will be held on Jun 7, the feast day of the Holy Trinity.

Cardinal John Tong said in a video recording uploaded on the Catholic Church's website that those who fear getting infected if they attended mass on Sunday may continue attending online masses "and receive spiritual Communion" to fulfill their obligation as Catholics.

Alternatively, they can attend mass on a weekday in lieu of Sunday, as churches will only take in people at half their usual capacity as part of the anti-Covid measures.
Cardinal Tong issued the advisory after consulting with medical professionals.


He urged all Catholics to continue adhering to preventive measures to protect themselves from the virus.

"The pandemic is far from being over. We must carry on with our preventive measures. When we stand by each other with hope and count on our Lord, I am sure peace will be with us," he said.

Churches will only be half-full even on Sundays

The chancery later issued an advisory on the preventive steps that will be taken in churches to protect the congregation from infection:

1. Churches should be well ventilated and seats cleansed and disinfected regularly, with a disinfected carpet at the church entrance.


2. The congregation should be limited to 50% of the normal capacity of the church.

3. When entering the church compound, the faithful should put on a face mask, take body temperature and cleanse their hands with sanitiser.  The use of holy water at the church entrance should be suspended.

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4. Ushers should see to it that inside the church, social-distancing is kept between persons.




5. The use of liturgical booklets and hymnals should be suspended (projectors may be used instead).

6. Sunday collections should be taken up after Mass, with one or several donation boxes provided.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love.

7. The sign of peace should be expressed by bowing heads, instead of shaking hands.

8. For the time being, Holy Communion should be received only “in the hand”.  One’s hands should be sanitised before and after receiving Communion.

10. Once the Mass is concluded, the faithful should leave the church compound and avoid socializing.

11. After Mass, the seats in the church should be cleansed and disinfected.

12. The Parish Priest or those delegated by him should  see to it that the foregoing Guidelines are duly observed.

Notes:
i. If necessary and feasible, while the Mass is being celebrated in the church, those who are not able to actually take part in the liturgy may be allowed, in an  open, spacious  area nearby (for example,  the parish hall or the open area adjoining the church),  to attend the Mass online and receive Holy Communion. If  arranging for Sunday Masses is not feasible under the current situation, a parish may fix one or more time slots for giving out Holy Communion to those who have attended Sunday Masses online and are properly disposed, by adopting a simplified rite to be provided by the Diocesan Liturgy Commission.

ii. If necessary and feasible, a parish may arrange for one or two more Sunday Masses to meet the spiritual needs of the faithful.

iii. Children, the elderly or the disabled and those who accompany them to Mass may sit together.

iv. Attending Sunday Mass is an obligation on the part of the faithful.  Nevertheless, in so far as the pandemic is not yet completely contained, Cardinal John Tong, as a discretionary measure, permits the following alternatives to attending the Sunday Mass —
a. Those who have worries that they might get infected by the pandemic, if they come to church to attend the Sunday Mass, may attend it online (and receive spiritual Communion) or perform some acts of devotion, such as reading the Bible, etc.
            b. Granted that the seating in churches is being restricted at present, one can take part in a weekday Mass instead of the Sunday Mass. The above discretionary measure will be terminated once the pandemic is fully contained and the local situation is back to normal.  A related announcement will be made.

v. Members of the faithful who are sick, as well as those who  have someone undergoing “self-quarantine” at home, should not go to church on Sunday; instead, they can attend the Sunday Mass online or perform some acts of devotion.

vi. With pastoral solicitude and bearing in the mind the spiritual needs of the faithful, Parish Priests should make suitable arrangements for weekday and Sunday Masses, or the giving out of Holy Communion.  If they face practical difficulties in these matters, they can consult the Diocesan Curia.

Filipina drug courier warned against seeking further sentence cut

Posted on 22 May 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao


Image may contain: food
These are the cocaine pellets seized from Penascosa at the HKIA upon her arrival from Dubai on Feb 13, 2016.


A Filipina former helper who was jailed nearly three years ago for 15 years and five months for drug trafficking failed in her bid today, May 22, to seek a High Court review of her sentence and got instead a warning not to push her appeal.

Court of Appeal Justice Andrew Macrae said appellant Imelda G. Pensacosa was lucky she got a substantial discount in her sentence despite being found to have lied about a fellow Filipina's alleged involvement in her case.

Penascosa had asked for a shorter sentence, saying she helped airport Customs officers in a controlled but unsuccessful try to trap the recipient of the drug on the night of her arrest on Feb 13, 2016.


When Macrae asked why the applicant was appealing 29 months out of time, she said she needed to be with her children and her sick mother.

The mother of three also cited her work with prison chaplain Fr. John Wotherspoon in warning women against drug cartels that dupe them into becoming drug carriers.

She pleaded guilty on Nov 8, 2017 to trafficking in a dangerous drug before High Court Judge Gareth Lugar-Mawson just before she was supposed to go on trial.


Her lawyer then asked for a lenient sentence, but Lugar-Mawson said the 33% discount he gave her was already light considering her delayed guilty plea, the amount of drug involved and the international aspect of the case.

Customs & Excise officers seized from Penascosa three metal boxes of chocolate which she claimed were handed to her at Dubai airport by another Filipina named Jennifer, as presents for her children.

The boxes were found to contain 248 pellets of solid cocaine weighing a total of four kilos. Inside was 3kg of pure cocaine with a street value of more than $4 million.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love.

Penascosa, a former domestic worker in Macau, said in a letter to Justice Macrae that she was not aware the metal boxes contained a dangerous drug. She said she met Macau-based Jennifer and her Filipino partner Edilberto when she applied for a job with the man’s employers there.

Summing up her case, the judge said Penascosa flew to Dubai via Hong Kong on Feb 8 on an Emirates Airlines return ticket allegedly bought by Jennifer, but found no job there.

In Dubai, two men – one of whom Penascosa understood to be Jennifer’s brother –gave her two mobile phones, one her for communications in the emirate and another, for her use in Hong Kong.

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Penascosa was also told to contact a certain Tony, described as the boss, who would send his brother Mike to meet her at Dubai Airport. Instead, it was Jennifer who showed up, handed her the boxes of chocolates, then boarded the same flight to Hong Kong.

But when Macrae asked for information about Jennifer, the prosecutor said it was on record that the Filipina was not in Hong Kong on the dates Penascosa mentioned. Macrae said Lugar-Mawson apparently did not believe her tale about Jennifer.

Justice Macrae acknowledged Fr Wotherspoon’s letter crediting the applicant’s help in his campaign for drastically cutting the number of Filipinas “drug mules” that made her one of the last 20.

But he said the 15 years and 5 months the appellant got was already two and a half years lighter than the 17 years and 11 months that would have been rightly meted her, as her offense normally called for 23 years plus an extra 5 years due to its international aspect.

The judge said she could still appeal, but warned her that if she does, the court could take back the extra two and a half years discount that she got because of the Jennifer spin.

Wotherspoon, who attended the hearing, expressed surprise afterwards at the disclosure about Jennifer not being in Hong Kong on Feb 13, 2016. He said Penascosa was lucky her extra discount was not taken back.


Agency owner loses licences for two companies after overcharging Filipina jobseeker

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao


Agency owners may lose more than just one license if they overcharge job applicants   
All it took was one count of overcharging a job applicant for one agency owner to lose the licenses of his two companies.

Last May 19, the Commissioner for Labour revoked the license of K&H Employment Agency over an incident that happened nearly two years ago, which led to its sister company, Kai Sing Employment Agency, being deprived of its license.

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Both agencies were licensed in the name of one person.

According to a spokesperson for the Labour Department, a Fillipina domestic helper approached Kai Sing for a job referral in August 2018.


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On May 8 last year, she filed a complaint with the Employment Agencies Administration that she was overcharged in placement fees by Kai Sing.

After investigation, Kai Sing was found to have overcharged the FDH by $1,648. Kai Sing's licensee was subsequently convicted on Jan 10 this year, and the license was revoked.



Since the licensee of Kai Sing was also the licensee of K&H Employment Agency, K&H’s license was also revoked by the Commissioner for Labour.

“Labour has all along been taking vigorous enforcement action in combating the malpractice of EAs. Apart from conducting routine and surprise inspections of the agencies, investigation will be initiated as soon as [the department receives] any complaint against them,” the spokesperson said.

“If there is sufficient evidence, prosecution will be instituted accordingly.”

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love.

He reitereated that employment agencies must not charge more than 10% of a jobseeker’s first monthly salary as commission.

Under the Employment Ordinance, any person who operates an agency without a license or any agency that charges more than a 10% of the jobseeker's first monthly salary faces a maximum sentence of $350,000 fine and imprisonment for three years.

8 recent arrivals from Pakistan found with Covid-19

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

All the new cases flew into Hong Kong from Pakistan via Doha in Qatar
Hong Kong has recorded eight new cases today, May 21, seven of them involving patients who all flew in aboard a Qatar Airways flight from Pakistan via Doha yesterday. The other one arrived on Saturday and fell sick in a quarantine center yesterday.

They brought the city’s total tally to 1,063 after three days of no new cases.

Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection said the new cases included  three females who are all related, aged between 11 and 31; as well as a 56-year-old man and his two sons, aged 14 and 22.


They all flew aboard flight QR 818 which arrived in Hong Kong yesterday.

A 25-year-old man on the same flight also tested positive today.

The eighth case is  a 73-year-old woman who returned from Pakistan on Saturday via QR 818, along with two other relatives who tested positive earlier.
She developed fever and breathing difficulties yesterday while under quarantine in Chun Yeung estate, and was sent to Tuen Mun Hospital for treatment.

Dr Chuang said 20 out of some 1,000 residents who returned from Pakistan recently have so far been found to have the virus. Because of the high rate of infection among the new returnees, she said the mandatory quarantine for those arriving from Pakistan will remain in place.
 
Dr Chuang says the high rate of infection among the new arrivals from Pakistan means the mandatory quarantine will stay

As of noon today, only 31 Covid-19 patients are still in hospital, after three more patients were discharged over the past 24 hours. A total of 1,028 patients have been discharged, while 4 have died.

Meanwhile, a 60-year-old man was sentenced to four weeks in jail in Kowloon City court today for violating his compulsory quarantine.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love.


The man was found to have left his quarantine place before the expiration of the 14-day period without reasonable excuse, or permission from an authorized officer.

He was stopped by staff of the Immigration Department at a border control point, and charged with contravening sections 8(1) and 8(5) of the Quarantine Regulation.

A spokesman for the Department of Health (DH) said the sentence sends a clear message to the community that breaching a quarantine order is a criminal offence and that the Government will not tolerate such actions.

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The spokesman said compliance with quarantine orders is of paramount importance in Hong Kong’s fight against COVID-19.

Pursuant to the Regulation, save for exempted persons, all persons who have stayed in the Mainland, Macao or Taiwan in the 14 days preceding arrival in Hong Kong, regardless of their nationality or travel documents, will be subject to compulsory quarantine for 14 days.

Starting on Mar 19, the Regulation was extended to all persons arriving from all other places overseas.

Those found violating their quarantine order are subject to a maximum fine of $25,000 and imprisonment for six months.

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