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NGO seeks donations to maintain shelter for pregnant migrants

Posted on 11 June 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao


PathFinders rescued this woman and her newborn who were sheltering in an open rooftop 
Non-government organization PathFinders Limited has taken the unprecedented step of asking for donations online in a bid to prevent the closure of its shelter for pregnant domestic workers.

In an email sent out on Jun 1, Children’s Day, PathFinders chief executive Catherine Gurtin asked supporters to help keep its shelter in operation.

“Today we celebrate children with the launch of our first ever digital fundraising campaign to Save our Shelter and ensure we can protect every child that needs help during this time of crisis,” the CEO said in her email. 


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Gurtin told The SUN that the NGO urgently needs to raise $432,000 to cover all its shelter-related expenses until the yearend. She said in this unprecedented time, when the protests and pandemic have hit everyone, “no amount is too small to make a difference.”

This is the first time PathFinders has appealed for donations since it was founded in 2008. Before this, the group had been the envy of other NGOs due to its strong support from corporates and private individuals.
But Hong Kong’s massive anti-government protests in the second half of last year and the coronavirus crisis that hit the city since the start of 2020 have changed all that.

Gurtin said like many charities in Hong Kong, PathFinders’ fundraising has been hit hard by the socio-political unrest and the Covid-19 crisis.
“Huge uncertainty as to whether we can hold our annual fundraising dinner, which was set to raise $3 million, means we’ve already made significant budget cuts this year. However, without additional funding, we face closing our emergency shelter and scaling back key services at our community centre,” Gurtin said.

The response from the public has been positive so far. As of this writing, with 51 days left in the campaign, PathFinders has already raised $186,025 from just 127 backers, or 43% of its target amoung
PathFinders’ shelter is the only one of its kind in Hong Kong. Since 2011, it has sheltered 332 babies and mothers who had nowhere else to go. 

“Before coming to us, they may have been living on a beach, in a park, on a friend’s sofa or even at a brothel. Our shelter is particularly critical for mothers considering adoption or those who’ve been physically or sexually abused and require extra care,” Gurtin said.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love.
Without its shelter, the health and safety of homeless babies and mothers will be at risk, the CEO said. More so now that the demand for Pathfinders’ services has surged.

“We’ve had an 80% increase in hotline calls since January and our case managers are at full capacity juggling 173 cases involving 213 babies and children. Feedback from our beneficiaries shows increased challenges accessing basic supplies and food,” she said.

Kuma Chow, who leads the fundraising drive, said PathFinders used to have two shelters, but funding constraints had led the NGO to shut one of them. The remaining shelter houses four to five families and has reached full capacity, she said.

Operating the shelter costs about $72,000 a month, Chow said. This includes rent, utilities, supplies and food allowances, and the cost of the shelter manager, who provides specialist care, counseling and guidance to resolve residents’ crisis and empower them to plan a bright future for their child.

“As a non-subvented NGO, we have no government funding, so are reliant on charitable foundations and the private sector. We’ve seen a drop in donations from individuals, community groups and corporates,” Chow said. 

For the last five years, PathFinders had covered its shelter expenses with generous funding from a corporate donor. But, like many fund providers, the donor’s policy on corporate social responsibility prevents it from supporting the charity beyond five years.

“We are yet to secure a new sponsor, and without our fundraising dinner this year, we do not have enough funds to cover the expenses. If we cannot raise enough donations from our crowdfunding campaign, we will be forced to close [our shelter],” Chow said. 

“If this happens, we’ll try to refer homeless women and their babies to other shelters, but we’ve heard many are already full and not accepting new admissions,” she said.
 
The NGO has looked after homeless mothers and their babies since 2008
She fears that with nowhere to go and in a desperate state, the women risk being taken advantage of, getting into involuntary relationships and taking up illegal work like drug trafficking or dish washing.

“Such dangerous environments and social groups are unsafe for children, and if they were to get arrested or go to jail, the children would suffer even more,” Chow said.


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Consulate helps 120 more stranded OFWs to fly to Manila

Posted on 10 June 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap


Some of the 120 OFWs who managed to fly home today after getting help from the Consulate 
(photos by Suzette Bagatua)

A second batch of Filipino domestic workers who were stranded in Hong Kong because of flight cancellations flew to Manila early today, Jun 9, after getting help from the Consulate.

According to Deputy Consul General Germinia Usudan who led the team that saw off the group at Hong Kong International Airport, there were 120 OFWs out of the 225 Filipinos who boarded flight CX 907 which departed at 7:20 am.

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DCG Usudan was accompanied by other staff of the Consulate at the Philippine Overseas Labor Office, who helped the OFWs to check in their bags, and stayed until the repatriates were all cleared to board.

This is the second big group of stranded OFWs who managed to leave for home after getting stuck in Hong Kong due to repeated flight cancellations.

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The first group of 80 OFWs took the same early-morning CX flight on Jun 6, and were sent off by a large contingent from the Consulate, led by Consul General Raly Tejada.

Congen Tejada said then that the Consulate helped coordinate with the airlines to get a fixed schedule for the departing OFWs, many of whom got stuck because of repeated flight cancellations by Cathay and Hong Kong Airlines.
He said the passengers were a mix of those with cancelled bookings and those who had booked for future flights.
 
DCG Usudan (second from left) and Consulate staff who assisted the returning OFWs

Unlike in other mass repatriations carried out by the government in various posts abroad, the tickets of the OFWs in Hong Kong were paid for by their respective employers.

Other big groups of Filipino repatriates had been flown home from different countries at various times in the past after they appealed to the government for help.


All were stuck in their jobsites for months, jobless and with cash running out, either because of lockdowns or travel restrictions.

The latest group of OFWs to be flown home at government expense was made up of 181 OFWs who were repatriated today from Indonesia.

OFWs repatriated from Indonesia are welcomed by DFA staff in Manila

In the Philippines, inbound travel was also suspended for a time because of the huge number of OFWs who got  stuck in quarantine centers for up to two months while waiting for their Covid-19 test results. 

The facilities had to be cleared first before Ninoy Aquino International Airport was reopened to incoming flights.

Up to half a million OFWs, many of them sea-based, are expected to lose their jobs abroad as a result of the pandemic.

In Hong Kong alone, nearly 7,000 Filipino domestic workers have lost their jobs since February, when the coronavirus swept across the city.

OFW numbers declined the most between March and April, when more than 3,000 lost their jobs.

Covid-19 cases in Phl near 24,000 as 2 OFWs test negative, then positive

Posted on No comments
By  The SUN

DOH tally as of June 10

The number of coronavirus disease cases in the Philippines has climbed up to 23,732 today, Jun 10, with an additional 740 cases being recorded by the Department of Health.

The new cases consisted of 452 “fresh” cases, meaning those where the result was released to the patient within the past three days, and 288 “late” reports, or those that were reported four days or more days ago.
There was one repatriate among the fresh cases, and a significant 45 repatriates among the late cases, meaning newly returned overseas Filipino workers are still not getting their test results on time so they can be treated immediately.

In its daily update, The DOH said the cases reported today were based on the accomplishment reports by only 47 out of 54 current operational labs, indicating the total tally could be higher.

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A total of 159 recoveries were reported today, bringing the total to 4,895. A total of 10 patients died, bringing the death toll to 1,027.

Metro Manila accounted for 91 of the fresh cases, the Central Visayas 83, and returning OFWs 22. The remaining 277 came from elsewhere in the country.
 
46 newly arrived OFWs are among those in today's positive list, but only 1 got the result in last 3 days

Among the newly reported cases of OFWs who tested positive are two women who were initially cleared of the disease after undergoing quarantine in Metro Manila, but were found infected on reaching their home province.

The first is a 30-year-old pregnant woman in Ilocos Sur who became her province’s third Covid-19 case, and the second is a female worker from Saudi Arabia who tested positive in Davao del Sur.
The pregnant OFW arrived in Manila from Taiwan Apr 15 and was quarantined for 14 days in a Pasay City hotel. She went home after her test result came out negative on May 9.

But she was found positive Jun 8, a day after she consulted the city health office after experiencing fever, sore throat and body malaise.


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In Davao del Sur, the town of Sta. Cruz reported its first Covid-19 case on Jun 9, raising the number of cases in the province to 15. The municipal health officer said the 23-year old woman tested positive for the coronavirus after returning from Saudi Arabia.

The OFW arrived in Metro Manila on May 18 and was quarantined in a facility there. After initial test results showed her negative for the virus, she was allowed to board a flight to Davao City on May 30.

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Pinay, Indons who testified vs. jobs scam mastermind each jailed 3 months

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

The three were sentenced at Shatin Magistrates Court

One Filipino and two Indonesian maids who helped Immigration officers smash a syndicate that used bogus contracts to get them a work visa, have each been sentenced to three months' imprisonment, half of what they should have gotten if they did not cooperate with investigators.

The three helpers, who all pleaded guilty to a charge of conspiracy to defraud, were Filipina Rose P. Alarcio, 48; and Indonesians Rohaela (one name only), 43, and Dwijayanti Ayun.
Shatin Magistrate Samuel Yip gave all three an identical 50% discounts in their sentences for helping in the investigation of the scam that led to the arrest and conviction of an employment agency director who arranged their fake employment contracts.

The defense counsel asked for a bigger discount than the normal 30% for the three, saying that the mastermind who she did not identify, was convicted recently and is now serving jail time due to the substantial help provided by the maids in busting the scam.

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She said the defendants issued statements identifying the mastermind, providing the agency’s address and testifying during the trial of the culprit.

On May 29, the District Court convicted the mastermind, a 43-year-old Hong Kong resident, of three counts of conspiracy to defraud and five counts of using false instruments, and sentenced him to 43 months in jail.
The scam was discovered when Immigration officers investigating illegal foreign workers found out the agency had been arranging for foreigners to apply for work visas using the bogus employment contracts for domestic workers.

Another 17 Indonesian and Filipino helpers involved in the case were jailed for eight months each in Shatin court earlier for conspiracy to defraud, making false representation to an immigration officer, and breach of condition of stay.

The defense lawyer said Alarcio came to Hong Kong to work as a helper but her contract was terminated prematurely.  

The lawyer said the cases of the three defendants were identical and involved the same agency director who supplied them with fake employment contracts.

In the case of Ayun, the lawyer said the Indonesian used to work as a domestic helper, but lost her job. She went to the agency in search of a new employer, and was provided a bogus work contract that she used to apply for a working visa. After getting the visa, she took up a different job.

She is now on a dependant visa after marrying a local resident.

Immigration has been investigating the jobs scam under its Operation Shadowcatcher which was launched in March 2018.

Since then, 30 people have been arrested including the mastermind, other Hong Kong residents who signed up as employers, as well as Filipinos and Indonesians with FDH work visas but employed in other unspecified jobs.




PCG to mark Phl Independence Day with short, simple ceremony

Posted on No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap
While then Consul General Tony Morales was reading the president's message, protesters were massing in nearby Tamar
The combined effect of the pandemic and the ongoing protests in Hong Kong has made the Consulate to decide on having just a short and simple commemoration of the 122nd anniversary of the proclamation of Philippine Independence this year.

Consul General Raly Tejada said the biggest event in the Philippine calendar will be marked with an hour-long gathering, 9am to 10 am, at the Consulate on Friday, Jun 12.
“Pasensiya na muna – no food and strictly ceremonial proceeding lang,” he said in a message. “Maitawid lang natin ang mahalagang araw na ito.”

There will be no big social events, like the diplomatic reception traditionally hosted by the Consulate,  or an Independence Day Ball, which has for years, been organized by the Philippine Association of Hong Kong.
 
The reception line at the Conrad was far less busy than in previous years
Nor will there be a large gathering on Chater Road  in Central, where in years past, various Filipino community organizations in Hong Kong had come together to mount a day-long, or even a month-long, celebration of Philippine Independence.

The coronavirus has upended all those traditions this year, in the same way the anti-government protests derailed much of them last year.
On Jun 12 last year, both the flag-raising and breakfast gathering at the Consulate and the diplomatic reception at the Conrad later in the evening of the same day attracted far fewer people than in previous years because of the large mass gatherings in Admiralty.

Early on that day, protesters started streaming towards the government offices in Tamar, which is just a stone’s throw away from the Consulate. The protesters succeeded in preventing the legislative council from convening to debate a controversial extradition bill, which has since been junked.
By early evening the crowd had grown so big that a few tired protesters moved into the nearby Pacific Place and turned it into their command post. This was just about the time when guests were making their way to the Conrad, which could be accessed from the mall.

As a result, only about a third of all the invited guests at the diplomatic reception turned up, and no high-ranking official from the Hong Kong government came for the usual ceremonial toast and exchange of well-wishes between the two governments.
 
Some guests at the Consulate's reception got caught in pitch battles between protesters and police

By the time the reception finished about an hour earlier than usual, the street battles between the protesters and the police were in full swing, and some of the guests found themselves walking right into the confrontation.

There is no chance of that happening this year.
Congen Tejada said that at first, he had contemplated on limiting the gathering to only within Consulate staff, but later on decided to extend an open invitation to Filipino community leaders who might want to join the commemoration.

The foremost consideration was the distancing rule that allows only a maximum of eight people to gather in public. But since the event will be held indoors and will be short, with guests being asked to wear masks, the risk of contamination is low.

The second was budgetary constraints. Tejada said all non-essential expenses have been taken off their budget, as the government has been pouring much of its resources into helping Filipinos affected by the pandemic.

Even in Manila, this year’s commemoration at Luneta Park will be considerably muted.

An announcement from the government task force against Covid-19 today said that only 10 people will be at the wreath-laying ceremony, but did not indicate who would be there to represent the government.


Protests held in key HK districts to mark 1st anniversary of 1M march

Posted on 09 June 2020 No comments
By The SUN

Police made a number of arrests in Central, where protesters spread through several streets
Scores of people have taken to the streets in various parts of Hong Kong today, Jun 9, to mark the first year since an estimated one million people protested against the now-abandoned extradition bill proposed by government.

The protests were held despite police warnings that the gatherings were illegal as they were held without a permit, and violated social distancing regulations.

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Earlier, the Philippine Consulate issued an advisory, telling Filipinos to avoid places where protests are expected to be held. For today, the areas identified were Wanchai, Central, Tai Koo, Kwai Chung, San Po Kong, Kowloon Bay, Kwun Tong and other areas on Hong Kong Island.

The advisory said protests are also expected to be held on Friday, Jun 12; Sunday, Jun 14; Tuesday, Jun 16; Friday, Jun 19; Saturday, Jun 20; and Sunday, Jun 21.


The biggest gathering today was the one that started in the early evening in Chater Garden in Central, and spilled onto neighboring streets.

Police moved in with pepper balls and pepper spray after raising the blue flag warning as protesters blocked Des Voeux Road Central, bringing evening rush-hour traffic to a standstill. A number of people were arrested, but figures were not immediately available.
The protesters also occupied Ice House Street and Queen’s Road Central, Queen Victoria Street, and all the way to Jubilee Street near Sheung Wan.

Reports say officers also fired pepper balls to disperse people who had set up an umbrella barricade at Queen Victoria Street.



The police later said they seized umbrellas, paint thinner and empty bottles from an overpass on the adjacent Jubilee Street.

Earlier at lunch time, protesters also gathered inside the Landmark mall in Central and the APM shopping mall in Kwun Tong in commemoration of the huge protest against what many Hongkongers felt was a threat to their basic freedoms.

Lunchtime protest inside the Landmark in Central (RTHK photo)

This time around, protesters held aloft banners advocating Hong Kong independence.

They turned on the torches in their mobile phones, chanted slogans and held up the banners which read “never forget the heart when you started, persist till the end.”

At the APM mall, protesters gathered on different floors and sang protest songs that called for the “liberation of Hong Kong.”
 
Protesters in the APM mall called for independence for Hong Kong (RTHK photo)
Later in the evening, local television showed hundreds of people also gathered in Mong Kok, where they faced off with police in full battle gear.

Some of those who took part in the protests said they wanted to show their outrage now as it could become impossible to do the same once Beijing implements the national security law it has crafted for Hong Kong.

Others said it might be their last show of defiance since China appears dead-set on cracking the whip on dissent in the Special Administrative Region.

Protests were noticeably muted since China’s National People’s Congress passed the national security bill for Hong Kong last week.

Despite this, another big protest is being planned for Jun 19, when the rule limiting public gatherings to no more than eight people is expected to have been lifted.

Organizers said they decided to move by a week their plan to commemorate another turning point in the protests.

This was on June 12 last year, when the legislative council was forced to stop debating the extradition bill, after thousands of protesters blocked all access roads leading to the central government offices.


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