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Militant OFWs blast Duterte’s Anti-Terror Law and red-tagging of critics

Posted on 04 June 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao
 Eman Villanueva of Bayan HK & Macau shows his sentiment toward the Anti-Terror Bill 
Militant Filipino migrant workers in Hong Kong blasted today, Jun 4, the new Anti-Terror Act of 2020, questioning the haste which the Lower House passed the measure yesterday, while other bills addressing more pressing issues remain pending.

United Filipinos in Hong Kong chair Dolores Balladares said overseas Filipino workers  are angry over the railroading of the bill, especially amid the continuous spread of the coronavirus.

“In this time of global pandemic, with Filipinos anxious over family and friends getting sick or dying or their OFW family members unable to come home, the…government deemed it necessary to push this bill,” Balladares said in a press release.



The Anti-Terrorism Act is awaiting President Rodrigo Duterte’s signature after it was passed by the House of Representatives on Jun 3, as human rights advocates vow to challenge its “unconstitutional” provisions before the Supreme Court.

The legislation passed the Lower House by a vote of 173-31 with 29 abstentions. It gives the Duterte administration sweeping powers, including making arrests without warrants and holding suspects without charge for a longer period,.

As the approved version is copied exactly from the Senate’s version which the upper chamber passed in February, Duterte can sign it any time, lawmakers said.


On Monday, the President certified the bill as “urgent” and called for its passage before lawmakers go on a two-month break from Jun 6.

Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said today, however, that there will still be a bicameral conference between the two houses of Congress on Monday, Jun 8, before the bill is passed on to Duterte.

Edre Olalia, president of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers, said his group would challenge the bill’s “constitutionality” before the Supreme Court. He said the draconian measure stripped Filipinos of freedom of speech and association.


Retired senior associate justice Antonio Carpio said the Supreme Court in some cases would require an actual injury to happen before laws are challenged before them, but the Anti-Terror Law can be challenged “on its face” or right away.

“Facial challenge is allowed because the law touches on fundamental constitutional rights, like the right against arrests without court warrants, and provides penalties for its violation,” Carpio was quoted by Rappler as saying today, June 4.

The Supreme Court in 2013 junked a petition questioning the constitutionality of the 2007 Human Security Act, partly because the Court said that the possibility of abuse was merely speculative, thus ruling that a facial challenge was not allowed.

Carpio said the 2020 Anti-Terror Law’s new provisions are different in that facial challenge is now allowed.

Opposition lawmakers proposed changes to address “unconstitutional provisions” in the bill, but the pro-Duterte House leadership refused them at the second reading on Tuesday.

Jericho Nograles, from Puwersa ng Bayaning Atleta, a leading sponsor of the bill, said he had instructions from House public order committee chair, Masbate Rep. Narciso Bravo Jr, “to pass the bill without amendments.”

Quezon City Rep. Jesus Suntay, House human rights panel chair, cited several provisions that he said were “in violation of the Bill of Rights,” including Section 29, which allows warrantless arrests.

Another provision he cited extends the number of days a suspect can be detained without a warrant from three days to 14 days, extendable by another 10 days.

Vice President Leni Robredo questioned the bill’s intent and timing, saying some of its provisions may be used to crack down further on dissent and gag free speech but doesn’t address the nation’s more pressing needs amid the pandemic.

Robredo, a lawyer, said several provisions focus on expanding the definition of a terrorist and reducing checks and balances against wrongful arrest, which “cause a lot of fear.”

“Especially in the hands of people who have no qualms about using disinformation, inventing evidence, or finding the smallest of pretexts to silence its critics – this power is very dangerous,” she said.

Commission on Human Rights spokesperson Jacqueline de Guia said prolonged detention of suspects without a warrant “may result [in] cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment or torture.”

Amnesty International Philip­pines said the new law “disproportionately restricts human rights in the name of security.”

The Asean Parliamentarians for Human Rights said it was “extremely concerning” that, as it, the Anti-Terror Law could be “weaponized” by the administration.

But Senate President Vicente Sotto III assured critics that the bill “has more than enough safeguards” against abuses.

Roque, on the other hand, dismissed “unfounded fear” that administration critics would be Red-tagged and police would abuse their power to arrest supporters of civil organizations.
Some militant groups active in HK have been red-tagged by officials close to Malacanang
This was, however, disputed by Unifil-Migrante-HK, which condemned the red-tagging of Migrante International and other militant organizations like Bayan, Gabriela and Anakpawis.

The groups have been tagged as terrorists by the government arm, National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict, or NTF-ELCAC, even when they have elected representatives in Congress.

Balladares warned that a simple criticism of President Rodrigo Duterte could result in  one being arrested under the proposed new law.

“Imagine, just posting your criticism of the government on social media can make you punishable by law. It is clear Duterte has no need for citizens who can think critically,” Balladares said.

“What he wants is a society of mindless sheep so that his government can carry on with corruption and favoring oligarchs, his local cronies and foreign masters over his own people,” she added.

Balladares called for the junking of the anti-terror bill which she said “has no place in a Filipino society that loves democracy.”


Ex-DH about to give birth jailed 8 months for loan fraud

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao 

The defendant was assured jails have facilities for giving birth and raising babies

A Filipina who is nine months pregnant was sentenced to eight months in jail today, Jun 4, in Eastern court after she pleaded guilty to fraudulently taking out a $26,000 loan last year and overstaying her domestic helper’s visa.

Magistrate Bina Chainrai sentenced M. J. Aquino to eight months imprisonment for a charge of obtaining money by deception and two months for breach of condition of stay, to be served concurrently.

Aquino will now have to give birth while in custody. The magistrate assured her there are facilities for delivering babies and taking care of them inside the women’s correctional.
Chainrai said she considered the 28-year-old expectant mother’s condition but the sentencing guidelines for her offences called for immediate jail custody.

Aquino has been in jail since her arrest on Apr 29.

The prosecution applied for compensation of $26,000 to the money lender, Prime Credit, but Chainrai rejected it because the defendant said she had no money.

The prosecution said that the defendant, who arrived in Hong Kong in February 2018 to work as a domestic helper for a local family, went to Prime Credit in North Point on Jun 17, 2019 and applied for the loan. She was fired by her employer a few days later.
On Jun 23, the defendant collected the loan but did not inform the lending company that she had lost her job. The prosecution said this amounted to fraud as she had used an invalid employment contract as proof that she would able to repay the loan.

Immigration gave Aquino until Sept 19, 2019 to stay and find a new employer, but did not leave after that date.

In her defense, her lawyer said Aquino took out the loan to help two friends, also Filipina domestic helpers. She agreed to pay two of 14 monthly installments but lost her job. In the meantime, her two friends did not continue the repayment.
The counsel said Aquino filed a Labour case against her employer and won a $2,700 settlement in September. When Chainrai asked why she did not pay the loan with the money, the lawyer said his client had used the money to pay her boarding house.

The lawyer said Aquino has three children, aged 3, 5 and 7, with her boyfriend in the Philippines. While in Hong Kong, she got into a relationship with an Indian national, the father of the child she is carrying.


Test delays still plague many travelers arriving in Manila

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

More Filipinos are due to return home over the next few days, as NAIA opens to more international flights

Filipinos who have recently arrived, or are due to fly home to the Philippines in the next few days, are up in arms over the lack of clear guidelines about the mandatory quarantine they face on arrival in Manila, and reports of long delays in travelers’ swab test results.

The travelers bombarded the Ninoy Aquino International Airport’s Facebook page with angry comments or inquiries after the Manila airport announced it would accept more international flights beginning Jun 1.

For those who are due to fly to Manila, the biggest concern is when they could finally reach their homes, given the well-publicized delays in the release of Covid-19 test results.
Philippine health officials have promised a wait of only between three to five days, but many who are already under quarantine in Metro Manila have reported being stuck in their hotels for days, with no idea of when their test results would come out.

At least one angrily disclosed that no test kits were available when he arrived at NAIA on Jun 1, and he was still waiting for when he could have the swab test, two days after checking into his hotel for quarantine.

One female OFW who did not say where she was deployed  said she was a domestic helper who left her job after her employer’s mother tested positive for the coronavirus disease while his sibling died of the illness. She was concerned that she would be made to pay for her swab test and quarantine.


Theresa Valdez Pascual, apparently a non-OFW, commented that if there is no test kit, then the authorities should just let them test in the provinces.

“Kung walang testing kit, sa uuwiang bayan na lang magpa-test at pauwiin na sana mga non-OFW para di na gagastos pa sa hotel... Pahirap ang ginagawa sa mga non-OFW,” she added.
 
 Many recent arrivals are complaining about the lack of test kits at the airport


Another OFW, Joy Martinez, said she had been under quarantine in a hotel in Pasay City for 36 days, and had already tested negative, but she was yet to be picked up by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration so she could fly home to Iloilo.

“Sobrang nakakainis na talaga. Lagi kong kinakausap sarili ko na kelangan pa ng patience, makakauwi din ako at sabi ko pa sa sarili ko baka wala pang scheduled flight pa-Iloilo kaya siguro di pa nila ako sinusundo dito. Pero nalulungkot na po ako.”


Their frustrations about the delayed test results was worsened by a report in a Manila daily that the Philippine Coast Guard, which is conducting swabbing at the airport, had stopped the procedure since Jun 1 as test kits ran out.

This means a longer wait for thousands of OFWs and other overseas Filipinos who will be arriving in waves from various work locations in other parts of the globe.

One Manila daily reported that around 100,000 OFWs stranded in various jobsites, mostly in the Middle East, are expected to be repatriated in the coming days.

This was just days after 24,000 OFWs stuck in various quarantine facilities in Metro Manila for up to two months after testing negative for the coronavirus, were taken home on mercy trips over a week-long period.  

Philippine Airlines resumed its international flights between Manila and Singapore today, Jun 3. On Monday, the carrier restored its Manila to San Francisco flights as it struggles to return to normal operations after a four-month stoppage due to travel restrictions that were imposed in the wake of the pandemic.

PAL flights between Manila and Hong Kong, however, will resume on Jun 19 and only every Friday, according to the carrier’s published flight schedule for June.

On its domestic network, however, PAL cancelled and moved back some flights it had earlier scheduled for key provincial destinations, attributing this to “fine-tuning of local government entry restrictions and requirements.”

It’s been widely reported in local media that local government units have resisted the resumption of domestic flights, citing the possibility of contamination, given the high rate of infection in Metro Manila and other key areas in the country.

The carrier’s flight to Cebu City earlier scheduled for Jun 3 has now been moved to Jun 5 and the flight to Davao City earlier scheduled for Jun 5 has been rescheduled for Jun 8.

Budget carrier Cebu Pacific, meanwhile, announced it is resuming domestic flights from Jun 4 until Sunday to General Santos City, Naga City and Cagayan de Oro City.

“As this is a developing situation, flight schedules may change, subject to approval from the Inter-Agency Task Force, the local government units and other concerned government agencies,” CebuPac said in an announcement.

Those who posted comments on the NAIA page mostly said they are due to arrive in Manila this month from various places such as the United States, Middle East, and other parts of Asia.

The page administrators patiently explained the protocols imposed by the quarantine authorities who comprise the Inter-Agency Task Force overseeing the anti-Covid-19 tests for all passengers arriving at the airport from various points abroad.

One OFW asked whether she will have to pay for the quarantine facility and testing costs, to which a certain TK Alvarez replied: “Kung OFW ka po, Ate, shouldered ng OWWA at PhilHealth ang expenses mo sa hotel facility hanggang sa makauwi ka. Kung non-ofw naman po, galing po lahat sa bulsa ang gastos.”

“What a joke! No test kit and forcing the people to wait in the designated hotel? Ashame! (sic),” blasted a certain Frank Leone, who suggested requiring inbound Filipinos to have a Covid test in their places of origin and have their negative result stamped by their embassy then undergo rapid testing  upon arrival.

A certain Juan Maria asked whether pregnant women also need to undergo mandatory quarantine, while another asked whether senior citizens can be spared the long wait for results.

The webpage admin replied that arriving passengers are required to undergo mandatory swab testing. Senior, persons with disability, pregnant women and children should seek assistance from Coast Guard personnel for special treatment upon arrival, he said.


HK officials sign deal with banks for $10k payout to PRs

Posted on 03 June 2020 No comments
By The SUN

HK finance officials with bank representatives after the signing

The Hong Kong government today (Jun 3) signed service agreements with representatives of 21 banks to facilitate the release of the $10k relief aid to permanent residents under the Cash Payout Scheme.

Financial Secretary Paul Chan said at the signing ceremony that the agreement will make it possible for eligible people to register and receive the payout quickly, conveniently and safely.

He said the preparation for the payout, meant to relieve financial pressure on residents because of the pandemic, is nearing completion. The registration is expected to start by the end of this month, with payment to be made in July.


Under the agreement, the banks will provide the electronic registration platform. All eligible people may register with their bank’s website or internet banking service, and the money will be paid into their sole-name account.

Alternatively, they may also fill in a registration form and submit it to their bank.

All Hong Kong permanent residents aged 18 and above, are eligible for the cash assistance.
A separate relief measure is being considered for other residents who have been in Hong Kong for less than seven years, which is the required period before anyone could qualify for permanent residency.

Signing on behalf of the government was Charlix Wong, director of accounting services.

Aside from Chan, the other officials who witnessed the signing were Christopher Hui, secretary for financial services and the treasury and Eddie Yue, chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.


Representatives from the 21 following banks each signed the agreement:

1. Bank of China (Hong Kong)
2. Bank of Communications (Hong Kong)
3. Bank of East Asia
4. China CITIC Bank International
5. China Construction Bank (Asia)
6. Chiyu Banking Corporation
7. Chong Hing Bank
8. Citibank (Hong Kong)
9. CMB Wing Lung Bank
10. Dah Sing Bank
11. DBS Bank (Hong Kong)
12. Fubon Bank
13. Hang Seng Bank
14. The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation
15. Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (Asia)
16. Nanyang Commercial Bank
17. OCBC Wing Hang Bank
18. Public Bank (Hong Kong)
19. Shanghai Commercial Bank
20. Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong)
21. ZA Bank



Up to 15k OFWs stranded in PH start trickling into HK

Posted on No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Most HK-bound OFWs are unable to fly out because there are still no domestic flights in the Philippines

Filipino domestic workers have started arriving in Hong Kong in trickles after the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration started processing contracts and overseas employment certificates (OECs) again.

According to Alfredo Palmiery, president of the Society of Hong Kong Accredited Recruiters in the Philippines (Sharp), POEA started accepting 10 contracts per agency per day since May 18.

He said his own agency, Concorde International, has managed to release 39 OECs for Hong Kong-bound workers, and four have already been deployed.


Palmiery's Hong Kong counterpart, Fair Employment Agency, is one of the biggest players in the recruitment industry in the city.

But these are just a tiny fraction of the number of Hong Kong–bound domestic workers who have been stranded in the Philippines because of travel restrictions in both territories starting in February.

Palmiery said, “In my estimate, about 15,000 (workers) are in the pipeline – 5,000 agency hires and 10,000 balik-manggagawa (returning FDWs).”


The number includes those already contracted by employers but are still waiting for visa approvals in Hong Kong, he added.

His estimate could be a bit on the high side, however, as Hong Kong Immigration figures show a drop of only about 7,000 in the Filipino domestic workers population between February and May this year.

Even adding the progressive increase in their numbers year-on-year during normal times, the number could be closer to 10,000 – which, however, is still considerable.

Palmiery (in black jacket) estimates 15,000 OFWs bound for HK are stranded in the Philippines

Palmiery said many more are still waiting for the chance to depart for Hong Kong.

“Others are just renewing their expired medicals (clearances). Some could not depart because there are no available flights or transportation from the provinces,” he said.

The latter could be the bigger reason for the failure of most Hong Kong – bound OFWs to take up, or resume their jobs.


Much of the Philippines, in particular, Metro Manila, where the only operational international airport is located, has been under strict lockdown for the past 11 weeks.

Starting Jun 1, the metropolis been put under a more relaxed community quarantine, but domestic flights are still not being allowed, reportedly because of resistance from local government units, which fear the spread of the coronavirus.

Another big stumbling block is the mandatory 14-day quarantine imposed on those arriving in Hong Kong from overseas.


According to some Hong Kong employment agencies, many employers are hesitant to take newly arrived domestic workers into their homes, even if they tested negative on arrival at the airport.

If they choose to put them in hotel or a quarantine facility, employers could face considerable cost as Hong Kong labor laws require them to pay for the worker’s accommodation and food.

But even if employers are desperate enough to agree to the added costs, many agencies say there are still only a few OFWs  able to fly into Hong Kong from Manila.

One reason is the apparent inability of the POEA to return to full operations despite Metro Manila’s move to the less restrictive general community quarantine (GCQ).

In an advisory dated Jun 1, POEA said that despite the relaxation of distancing rules, its offices in Metro Manila will continue to work at reduced capacity “until such time that the 50% manpower complement required under GCQ set-up is achieved.

This is despite an announcement from the Department of Labor and Employment that it was stepping up its Balik Abroad program for stranded OFWs, along with its Hatid OFW program for those who were on their way back home after losing their jobs abroad.

In line with the Dole move, the Labor Attache in Hong Kong, Melchor Dizon, announced on May 26 that his office would start processing all work contracts again, including those for terminated OFWs whose visas have been extended by Immigration.


Five Pinoys, 8 others fined for illegal gambling

Posted on 02 June 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

This fish-hitting game is popular among illegal gamblers in HK (The New Paper photo)

Five Filipinos were among 13 people fined in Eastern Court today, Jun 2, after pleading guilty in two separate cases of illegal gambling in the same place in April and May.

The Filipinos who pleaded guilty in the first case were former bartender Ray Onate Jr., 31; asylum seeker Jennifer Baguio, 44; housewife Carolina Fung, 48; and unemployed resident Liza Lancian, 43.

Their co-defendants who also pleaded guilty were local residents Chow Kai-ming, 38; Cheung Chun-yuen, 34; Liu Yan-sau, 58, and Thai male boxing coaches Amnat Bhupasiri, 23, and Nantawut Teeravit, 36.

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Indian female Sarosh Qazi, 33, pleaded guilty to “managing a gambling establishment” in both cases, but Magistrate Stephanie Chui set aside her plea in the second case and ordered a trial after she disagreed with the facts.

The prosecution charged that at 7:05 am on Apr 2, special duty squad officers from the Wanchai District Police Station mounted an anti-gambling operation at a residential flat on 1/F, 47 Sharp St. East, Causeway Bay.

The officers saw the 10 defendants inside. Investigation revealed that Sarosh kept the gambling den while the nine others were gamblers.

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Police seized two fish-hitting machines, one bird-hitting machine, two slot machines, 10 chairs, and playing cards. Sarosh and the 9 players were arrested, the prosecution said. They readily pleaded guilty at the hearing.

Magistrate Chui imposed fines of $3,500 on Qazi, $1,000 on Chow and $750 on Cheung, depending on the number of their previous similar convictions.

Onate was fined $300,  while Baguio and Lancian, with previous similar convictions, drew $500 each. Fung, with three previous records, was fined $750.    



On May 31, just over a month since the first operation, police again raided the same flat managed by Sarosh, and found four people gambling inside, including Filipina Cecilia Tejam, 51.

The officers again arrested Sarosh, as well as Tejam and male local residents Fan Sui-wing, 30; Raymond Chan Ka-chuen, 31, and Lam Chi-kuen, 32.

Of the four alleged gamblers, Tejam, Fan and Lam pleaded guilty while Chan said he was not guilty. Tejam was fined $800 and Fan $2,000. Lam, with five previous convictions, was slapped a $4,500 penalty.

Sarosh and Chan will stand trial in the same court on July 28. Sarosh for managing the illegal establishment, and Chan for illegal gambling.


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