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3 new arrivals from Phl test positive for Covid-19

Posted on 29 June 2020 No comments
By The SUN

The 3 new Covid-19 patients flew in from Manila to HK yesterday, Jun 28 (file photo)
Three women who flew in from Manila yesterday were among four new cases of Covid-19 reported today, Jun 29. They brought Hong Kong’s total tally to 1,204.

The fourth new case is a female student from Britain who arrived on Jul 16 and tested positive on the eve of her last day of mandatory quarantine.

Records from the Centre for Health Protection showed two of the new arrivals from the Philippines, aged 36 and 53 years old, were asymptomatic.

The third, also aged 36, and is described as “epidemiologically lined to the older woman, had a cough.
The first patient was in the Philippines from Mar 2 to Jun 28; the second, from Mar 5, and the third, from Mar 1.

They were all taken from the AsiaWorld-Expo testing site to United Christian Hospital in Kowloon for isolation and treatment.

The student from Britain was moved to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Yaumatei from her home in Knutsford Terrace in Tsim Sha Tsui.




There were no local cases reported for the tenth straight day.

The recent spike in the number of passengers from Manila testing positive for the coronavirus disease on arrival at Hong Kong airport has led officials to consider requiring Filipino migrant workers to be quarantined outside their employer’s house.
 
HK officials the high rate of infection from Manila make Filipino domestics unsuitable for home quarantine


Labor Secretary Law Chi-kwong said on Saturday he was in talks with health officials on the possibility of declaring Filipino domestic workers unsuitable for home quarantine.

With an estimated 10,000 Filipino workers due to arrive in Hong Kong to take up employment, Law said there could be 65 infected patients from among them, given the rate of infection among new arrivals from Manila.
He said these 65 patients could pass on the virus to people in their employers’ home, potentially causing a new community outbreak.

Law also said the government was not keen to see FDWs arriving by the thousands in the next few weeks, in line with measures to control the spread of the coronavirus.

 For details on the new cases, please check this link to the HK government's website: 









Generous donors help avert closure of PathFinders’ shelter

Posted on 28 June 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

PathFinders provides shelter for homeless migrant mothers and their children 

A first-ever call for funding assistance by PathFinders Limited, a Hong Kong non-government organization that is helping needy migrant mothers and their children, has received overwhelming support.

With still a few weeks to go before the fundraising is set to end, the NGO said it has already exceeded its target after an outpouring of support from donors.

“In total, we have raised $452,000, which will cover all shelter-related expenses until the end of 2020 and into 2021, and will ensure the health and safety of homeless babies and mothers,” said PathFinders, which is headed by chief executive Catherine Gurtin. 
Gurtin took the unprecedented step on Jun 1 of emailing PathFinders supporters and friends to appeal for help to keep its shelter running until the end of the year.

The group had a target of $432,000 to cover all shelter-related expenses until Dec 31. Little did it expect that support for its crowd-funding activity would exceed expectations.

“A huge THANK YOU to everyone who has supported us! We are deeply touched by your generosity to help those less privileged during this difficult time,” PathFinders said in an emailed update.
“Thank you too for all the wonderful messages of encouragement you shared with your donations, these have been a much-needed source of inspiration and hope for our team.”

Without funding support, PathFinders would have been left with no option than to shut its shelter, which it opened in 2012 to provide an abode for homeless and pregnant migrant workers.

Many of those who seek help from PathFinders are migrant women who are illegally fired by their employers after they get pregnant, leaving them homeless and with nowhere to go for help.

A few are forced to overstay due to the stigma of going home as a single mother, or because they got pregnant by a man other than their husband.
 
The NGO also holds talks with FDWs on such topics as love scams, maternity rights and protection
Such was the case of Gema, an Indonesian helper, who was found by an acquaintance while she slept in a park in Yuen Long at the height of winter with her seven-day-old son, Dian.

Gema was taken to PathFinders, which immediately took Dian to the hospital where he was confined for several days for emergency treatment because of an infection that developed in his legs.

“This happened because Gema was unlawfully terminated from her job as a foreign domestic helper,” the NGO said.

After the surgery, both mother and child moved into PathFinder’s shelter, where they were helped in getting Dian a birth certificate while Gema received counseling on her new role as a mother, and help prepare her for their return to Indonesia.

Kuma Chow, who heads the fundraising committee, said PathFinders has no government funding and relies only on charitable foundations and the private sector.

She said that if the targeted amount was not reached, they would have been forced to close, and the homeless women and babies they are caring for would have been referred to other shelters, many of which are already full.

“With nowhere to go and in a desperate state, they risk being taken advantage of, getting into involuntary relationships and taking up illegal work like drug trafficking or dishwashing,” she said.

“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.”

PathFinders is now looking for a new corporate sponsor because its previous supporter had reached its maximum duration of five years to sponsor a charity in line with its corporate social responsibility undertaking, Chow said.

The NGO said sponsors can still directly help babies and mothers who are in need through its 2020 “Bridge the Gap” campaign, which is raising funds for other critical services and its community center. 



Mga beach na magandang puntahan

Posted on No comments
Photo: Environmental Protection Department\


Plano mo bang mag-beach sa day off mo ngayong Linggo?

Inilabas na ng Environmental Protection Department (EPD) ang grado ng iba’t ibang beach sa Hong Kong.





Sa 38 na gazetted beach at isang non-gazetted beach (Discovery Bay, kung saan walang life guard), 12 ang may grading na Good (Grade 1), 15 na Fair (Grade 2) at 12 na Poor (Grade 3). Hindi lahat ay binuksan na sa publiko. 

Ang mga bukas nang Grade 1 beach (na may pinakamalinis na tubig) ay: Cheung Chau Tung Wan Beach, Shek O Beach, Hap Mun Bay Beach, Hung Shing Yeh Beach, Stanley Main Beach, Trio Beach, Repulse Bay Beach.



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Ang mga bukas nang Grade 2 beach ay: Big Wave Bay Beach, Lower Cheung Sha Beach, Cafeteria New Beach, Ma Wan Tung Wan Beach, Pui O Beach, Clear Water Bay Second Beach, Silverstrand Beach, Deep Water Bay Beach.

Ang mga Grade 3 beach ay: Golden Beach, Butterfly Beach, Lido Beach, Casam Beach, Silver Mine Bay Beach, Castle Peak Beach, Ting Kau Beach.

Pindutin para sa detalye

Ayon sa grading system sa Hong Kong, ang grado ng mga beach ay depende sa taglay na e. coli bacteria sa tubig, kung saan ang pinakamalinis ay Grade 1.
















HK may stop home quarantine for OFWs as woman arrives with virus from Mla

Posted on No comments
By The SUN
Today's case is the 7th case in a week of someone arriving from Manila with the coronavirus 

A 39-year-old woman who just arrived from Manila tested positive for Covid-19 today, Jun 27, becoming Hong Kong’s 1,197th case.

Records from the Centre for Health Protection shows the woman, likely a domestic worker, had stayed in the Philippines from Dec 23 last year until she arrived in Hong Kong yesterday.

She was taken directly from the AsiaWorld-Expo testing center to Princess Margaret Hospital in Kowloon for treatment. She was asymptomatic.



The new patient is the seventh new arrival from the Philippines who tested positive in Hong Kong within the past week alone. Most of them were apparently FDWs as they didn’t have any listed address in the city.

But many of the new imported cases in Hong Kong involve residents arriving from Pakistan. In one day alone last week, 29 new arrivals from Pakistan were found infected, and two days later, 16 others also tested positive.

The big number of infected patients who test positive on arrival from Pakistan, India and Bangladesh has prompted the Hong Kong government to put them in quarantine centers pending the result of their Covid-19 tests.
In the case of Filipino migrant workers, however, the practice has been to let them spend home quarantine with their employers. 

But with the recent spike in the number of newly arrived overseas Filipino workers who test positive on arrival, the government now says it may stop employers allowing the helpers to spend their quarantine in their homes.
Home quarantine rules: Filipino DHs may soon not be allowed to do this anymore

Secretary for Labour and Welfare Law Chi-kwong said in an interview with reporters today that his office is in talks with the Department of Health to add a condition to the quarantine orders for FDWs that they are not suitable for home quarantine.

“Because we have seen in the last month, Hongkongers coming back from the Philippines have a 0.65 per cent infection rate,” he said.


Pindutin para sa detalye
 
Using employment agency estimates that up to 10,000 domestic workers might arrive from the Philippines in the next few weeks, Law said that could mean an additional 65 new infections among them.

“If they are to be quarantined at home, then there will be a pretty high chance of them spreading the virus in the community,” Law said, but did not make reference to pre-quarantine tests made at the airport, which led to the early detection of cases among the new arrivals from Manila.
Law ruled out putting up the migrant workers in quarantine centers, as what a group of employment agencies suggested last week. He said there will not be enough room in the quarantine facilities, but the Labour Department would provide employers with information on cheap hotels.

At present, Hong Kong has three quarantine centers which could accommodate up to 2,323 people, but this number will soon be reduced by more than half as the largest facility, the Chun Yeung public housing estate in Fo Tan, will stop operating as such in July.
 












HK does not want more FDHs to come during pandemic, says labor chief

Posted on 27 June 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap
Law says HK is limiting the number of migrant workers entering HK during the pandemic

Hong Kong’s Secretary for Labour and Welfare, Law Chi-kwong, has said the government wants to restrict the entry of foreign domestic workers into Hong Kong in the time of the pandemic.

Law made the statement in response to questions from reporters as to why the government does not want to provide quarantine facilities for FDWs arriving in Hong Kong, or help employers pay for the cost of an alternative place for them to stay.

“I can say that we really want to help, but any way which would encourage directly or indirectly the movement of domestic helpers from Hong Kong to their homeland or from their homeland back to Hong Kong is not consistent with our policy to restrict such movement to reduce the risk of spread of the virus,” said Law.
His statement doused the hopes of about 10,000 Filipino migrant workers who have been on standby in the Philippines for months, hoping for a signal that the Hong Kong government would help ease their re-entry into the city.

The biggest hindrance is the high cost of the 14-day quarantine that they would be required to undergo on their arrival in Hong Kong.

Many employers balk at allowing them to spend the quarantine in their tiny homes, but are unwilling to pay for the cost of alternative accommodation and food during the quarantine. Estimates of a hotel quarantine, without the food, range between $4,000 and $8,000.
More than 100 OFWs flew out of HK earlier this month. Will they be able to come back?

Employment agencies have urged the government to set up a centralized quarantine facility for all incoming FDHs, while New Party legislator Eunice Yung has asked for subsidy to be extended to employers who put up their maids in hotels.

It now appears the government is not keen to adopt either option because it does not want the usual number of FDWs to enter Hong Kong while it is still dealing with the coronavirus contagion.
Law said that what the government has done so far, in fact, is to minimize the entry of FDWs into the city. This was the reason it has allowed those who are already in Hong Kong to extend their contracts, those who have finished their contracts to find new a new employer without leaving the city, or extend the visa of those who are in-between contracts.

“These are the policy strategies that try to restrict the movement of domestic helpers from Hong Kong to and from their homeland,” he added. “Any other measures, although we would like to help, if that would encourage such movement, that would be inconsistent with our anti-epidemic measures.

Instead, he said employers should consider helping FDWs who are already in Hong Kong to continue to stay by extending their contract. Employment agencies could also help by securing new employment for those who have completed their previous contract.
But it would appear the more relaxed visa policy does not extend to those who have been terminated or have broken their contracts, except those who fall under exceptional circumstances, like if the reason is due to the employer’s relocation, or financial difficulty.

Those who are terminated for other reasons will be allowed to extend their stay while looking for new employment, but will still have to return home and wait for their new visa there.

Secretary Law and Congen Tejada in a meeting last February

This was despite an appeal made by Consul General Raly Tejada last Wednesday, June 24, for the more relaxed visa policy to extend to all whose contracts have been prematurely cut for whatever reason.

According to Congen Tejada, Immigration only assured him that those who finished their contracts and have changed employers will be allowed to stay and take up their new employment.

“What they said it that they will consider requests by employees who have finished their contracts and transferring to new employers to remain in Hong Kong on a ‘case to case basis,”, said Congen Tejada.



“It is imperative that they present themselves to Immigration accompanied by their new employers so that they may present their case. I believe the commitment of the employer to take responsibility will be crucial here as determined by immigration officials.”

Congen said he realized the commitment does not differ much from the existing policy, but said it was “better than nothing.” He also pledged to continue discussing with Immigration further on the issue, as these are “unprecedented times.”

During his interview, Law said that during normal times, around 500 FDWs come into Hong Kong on a daily basis. But because of the entry restrictions taken by the government, the number of Filipino DHs who have entered Hong Kong in the past month had been reduced to only 1,7000.

He added: “But if we provide such facilitation that directly or indirectly encourages them to come, that number will jump up very quickly. Every day we will have about two to three flights from Manila. We would expect 500 of them every day. Within 14 days, we would have 7,000. That is a very large number. We would not have sufficient quarantine facilities to house this group of people just from the Philippines. This is the concern. The primary consideration is our anti-epidemic strategies to help or protect our citizens in Hong Kong.”


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Lawmaker urges govt to help employers pay for helper’s quarantine

Posted on 26 June 2020 No comments
By The SUN
 
Yung held a press conference to call  on government to help foot the bill for the helpers' quarantine 

New People’s Party lawmaker Eunice Yung has called on the government to put foreign domestic workers who will be arriving over the next few months in hotels, and help their employers pay for the cost.

Yung said more than 12,000 FDWs are expected to arrive in Hong Kong shortly, after being stranded in their home countries for months because of travel restrictions.

This could potentially cause a huge problem as many employers are not in a position to offer them space in their tiny homes for the mandatory quarantine.
“If the employers wish to ask for the quarantine arrangement, they have to pay for around $6,000 for the hotel fees, so I think the government should step in and give subsidies to the employers,” Yung said.

She also asked the government to help pay for the costs of testing FDWs for Covid-19, saying employers have complained about paying between $800 to $3,000 for each test.

Her call differed slightly from a proposal announced recently by a group of employment agencies, which urged the government to set up a quarantine center for all arriving FDWs.
The Hong Kong Union of Employment Agencies said in a press conference on Jun 14 that the government must act now to prepare for the influx of thousands of helpers in the coming months.

HKUEA chairman Thomas Chan said the call was the first in a series of activities the union was planning to get the government to act on its proposal.

He said the centralized quarantine center should be located far from populous areas to avoid the risk of a contagion in case anyone among the new arrivals had the virus.
 
Agencies want the migrant workers put in a remote quarantine center like the Lady Maclehose holiday village
There has been no response from the government so far.

In the meantime, many FDWs about to fly into Hong Kong have been posting online about various problems they face on their arrival, with many saying their employers are refusing to pay for all, or some, of their quarantine expenses.

At least three had to be fed by volunteers from the Filipino community when they appealed online for food donations, saying their employers did not make arrangements for their meals while under quarantine, although they did pay for their hotel rooms.


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But this shouldn’t be the case. When mandatory home quarantine was imposed on all passengers arriving in Hong Kong on Mar 19, the Labour Department immediately made it clear that employers should open their homes to their domestic helpers who need to self-quarantine for 14 days.

If the employers choose another place for the quarantine such as a hotel, they should pay for the accommodation, and provide the helper with a food allowance for her meals during the entire 14-day stay.
The government press release said: “The employer is also reminded to comply with his/her obligations under the SEC (standard employment contract), including bearing the accommodation expenses of the FDH and providing food allowance to the FDH.”

Earlier, on Mar 17, he Philippine Overseas Labor Office issued an advisory to all employment agencies, saying the same thing: that employers should provide for all the needs of their helpers during the quarantine period.











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