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1,500 more Filipino migrant workers lost job in June

Posted on 03 July 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

The FDH population continues to drop despite the resumption of deployment from the Philippines   

The Filipino domestic helper population in Hong Kong has dropped by nearly 1,500 last month, despite the arrival of a bigger number of workers who arrived from the Philippines in the same period.

According to Labour Secretary Law Chi-kwong on Saturday, June 27, the number of Filipino DHs who entered in the past month was around 1,700, meaning the job losses should have been offset, but were not.

The latest Immigration statistics show the Filipino FDH population in June was 211,426, down by 1,490 from the May figure. The drop was worse in April, when 2,941 FDH jobs were lost as Hong Kong’s economy continued to take a beating amid the pandemic.
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Since February, the cumulative job losses for Filipino migrant workers in Hong Kong has reached 8,309. There is no immediate relief in sight as Law said the government prefers to keep the number steady, in line with its policy of restricting people's movements into the city. 

The data from Immigration show a similar drop in the Indonesian domestic helper population, with 849 losing their jobs in June.

However, the statistics do not show the actual number of Filipino helpers who are still in Hong Kong, as hundreds appear to have taken advantage of Immigration’s decision to extend their visas because of pandemic-related travel restrictions in the Philippines.
Those already on visitor visa are terminated workers who have difficulty returning to their hometowns in the Philippines because of canceled flights or the unpredictable testing and quarantine system that are in place in the country.

Immigration has eased the “two-week rule” during the crisis to help terminated workers find new employers. However, they are still not allowed to take up their new jobs unless they have gone on home leave, or “exited” from Hong Kong.

The Immigration figures also do not include the thousands who were either stranded or unable to complete the processing of their exit visas in the Philippines, and were eventually fired by their employers who couldn’t wait for them any longer.
In early June, the Department of Labor and Employment admitted the pandemic and community lockdown to keep it in check had left 7.3 million Filipinos jobless, resulting in the country’s highest unemployment rate of 17.7%.

Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III said the lockdown during the community quarantine from March to May had also caused a huge 55.6% drop in the labor force participation rate, the lowest in the country’s labor market history.

The figure could still rise dramatically, as tens of thousands more overseas Filipino workers have lost their jobs abroad, but are still unable to return home due to lockdowns and travel restrictions in their place of work.

Foreign domestic helper population in Hong Kong, 2020

As of end of Month/Year
Philippines
Indonesia
India
Other nationalities
Total -- all nationalities
Jan-20
219,728
170,898
4,838
4,657
400,121
Feb-20
217,654
171,291
4,857
4,619
398,421
Mar-20
218,002
170,318
4,818
4,594
397,732
Apr-20
215,061
167,747
4,723
4,493
392,024
May-20
212,855
165,377
4,664
4,446
387,342
Jun-20
211,426
164,528

Inc India    9,052
385,006
Source: Immigration Department




Normal na ang serbisyong postal sa Pilipinas

Posted on No comments
Mapapabilis na serbisyong postal sa Pilkipinas at ilan pang lugar. (Photo: https://www.youth.gov.hk) 


Naibalik na sa normal mula ngayon (June 3) ang lahat ng serbisyo sa Pilipinas ng Hongkong Post, kasama na ang Speedpost, dahil sa unti--unti pagbabalik sa normal ng mga lipad papunta sa bansa, ayon sa isang anunsyo ng gobyerno.

Ang Pilipinas ay isa sa mga lugar kung saan naibalik na sa normal ang lahat ng serbisyong postal.


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Mapapabilis na rin ang serbisyo sa mga lugar na gaya ng United Kingdom, na kung saan ang mga ipinadalang sulat ay umabot ng hanggang tatlong buwan bago nai-deliver dahil ikinarga sa barko.

Pero sinabi sa anunsyo na dapat pa ring asahan ang pagka-antala ng ilang padala dahil sa mga hindi inaasahang pangyayari na dulot ng Covid-19 pandemic.

PINDUTIN PARA

Sa Asia, normal na rin ang serbisyo sa India.

Ang iba pang lugar at ang mga serbisyong kasama sa unti-unting pagbalik sa normal ay:

United Kingdom: Speedpost, e-Express al lahat ng serbisyong surface mail.


France, Poland, Spain at Switzerland at Estonia: lahat ng postal service, kasama na ang Speedpost,

Ang lagay ng serbisyong koreo sa iba pang mga lugar ay matutunghayan sa https://www.hongkongpost.hk/en/about_us/whats_new/notices/index_id_942.html.



Lesbian jailed 2 months for blackmailing girlfriend and sharing her nude pics

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

The Kowloon City magistrate rejected a plea not to said the defendant to jail

A Filipina lesbian domestic helper was locked up for two months on Thursday, Jul 2, in Kowloon City Court for sharing her girlfriend’s nude photos on WhatsApp even after the  woman gave in to her demand for money.

K.K. Caday, 34, was sentenced by Magistrate Amy Chan after pleading guilty to the offence of blackmail on Jun 26. She was immediately taken into custody after the sentencing as she was out on bail.

The defendant was arrested in November 2018 after the 48-year-old victim, also a Filipino helper identified only as “X”, reported the case to the police.


The prosecution said the defendant and X became lovers in 2018. Since then, Caday had been asking money from the victim to pay for her loans from United Asia Finance.

In early September 2018, the defendant asked for $3,704 to pay off her loan but X refused.

On Sept 3, Caday sent X via WhatsApp her nude photo that the lesbian had taken while they were having cybersex.  Caday threatened to send the photo to the victim’s friends if she didn’t give her money.
The girlfriend called up Caday explaining she didn’t have money, but the lesbian threatened her with a break-up.

A week later, some of X’s friends sent her nude photos that they had received from Caday. Fearing that more of her friends would receive the photos, X paid $3,704 into Caday’s UA loan account on Oct 4, 2018.

But after one of their mutual friends forwarded to X three more of her nude photos sent by Caday on WhatsApp, the victim reported the matter to the police on Oct 28, 2018.
The prosecution said the defendant remained silent after her arrest on Nov 13, 2018, but admitted the offense during an interview on Feb 22 last year.

In mitigation, the defense lawyer proposed to Magistrate Chan a non-custodial sentence, saying Caday had already compensated X for the $3,704 that she had paid for the defendant’s UA loan.

The lawyer said Caday’s 74-year-old employer was willing to continue hiring the helper as no one would look her. The counsel also said the defendant was supporting her 72-year-old mother in the Philippines and was remorseful.

The magistrate was not convinced and ordered the lawyer to stop as he kept mumbling. She said the offense was very serious because, after threatening X about her nude photos if she didn’t give money, Caday still shared them with their friends.

Chan gave discounts to Caday’s sentence to reflect her guilty plea and her repayment of the amount that her girlfriend was forced to pay because of the blackmail threat.

28 new cases today; 1 local, the rest imported

Posted on 01 July 2020 No comments
By The SUN
Aerial shot of Tai Wai housing estates (photo by Wing in Wikipedia)

Hong Kong has recorded its first local Covid-19 case in more than two weeks today, July 1, along with 27 others who recently arrived from overseas.

The local patient is a 46-year-old woman from Tai Wai who has no recent travel history, but may have caught the coronavirus from her husband or her son who tested positive yesterday (Tuesday) at the end of their quarantine period after arriving from the United States.

The new cases brought Hong Kong’s total tally to 1,233.

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The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) said the latest cases involve 12 males and 16 females, aged three to 46. Of the 27 new arrivals, 25 came from India, one from Indonesia, and the last from Kazakhstan. Most, or 19, of the new arrivals are asymptomatic.

The patient in what appears to be a locally acquired transmission developed a fever and a cough on Friday, and consulted a private doctor in Lam Tin on the same day.

She lives with her 59-year-old husband and her 19-year-old son in Mei Sau House, Mei Tin Estate in Tai Wai.
The two men returned to Hong Kong on Jun 17 and had been under compulsory home quarantine when they tested positive.

The woman has been listed as a local case, but with epidemiological links to imported cases.

The CHP said the woman had been to a wet market in Tai Wai and a supermarket in Mei Tin Estate before being admitted to Prince of Wales Hospital.

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As a precautionary measure, the CHP has distributed specimen bottles to residents of Mei Sau House, starting today.

Protests held as new security law takes effect in Hong Kong

Posted on No comments
By The SUN


Water is sprayed at anti-security law protesters in Causeway Bay this afternoon (RTHK photo)

A new security law that forbids, among other things, any call for independence or secession from China took effect in Hong Kong just in time for today’s 23rd anniversary of the Special Administrative Region’s handover from Britain.

Protesters marched in defiance of the new and harsher law this afternoon, with more than a thousand gathering at Victoria Park in Causeway Bay. Some tried to make their way to the Central Government Offices in Admiralty but were stopped in Wanchai by police who used pepper balls.

Latest reports say at least 140 people have been arrested, some in line with the new law, which prescribes a maximum sentence of life imprisonment for anyone in Hong Kong who is found guilty of the worst cases of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces.
Earlier, Hong Kong government officials led by Chief Executive Carrie Lam and three former incumbents, attended the traditional early-morning flag ceremony at Bauhinia Square just outside the Convention and Exhibition Centre in Wanchai.

Speaking afterwards, Lam said the passing of the national security law was a historic step forward in terms of Beijing and Hong Kong’s relationship, adding that it is a “necessary and timely” move to restore stability.

She described the new law as “constitutional, lawful, sensible and reasonable.”
Flag raising to mark the 23rd anniversary of Hong Kong's handover from Britain to China
Outside the venue, about a dozen members of the League of Social Democrats staged a rally, chanting slogans calling for the “end of one party rule” and the scrapping of the “evil security law”, and demanding the release of human rights activists detained on the mainland.

The law formally took effect in Hong Kong at 11pm last night after being signed by Lam.
Only two hours earlier, the legislation was approved unanimously by members of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, then was inserted into Annex III of the Basic Law of the Special Administrative Region.




It was then promulgated through a presidential order by Xi Jinping, and finally gazetted by the Hong Kong government, initially only in Chinese.

The law prescribes 10 years to life in prison for offenders deemed to have taken part in more serious crimes, while those who had minor roles face shorter sentences or some restrictions, like being barred from holding public office.

An article in the law provides that the crime of subversion can include the act of attacking or destroying government facilities so that they are unable to function normally.
Terrorism, on the other hand, could include acts such as arson, or damaging public transport and utilities as a means to threaten the central or Hong Kong governments.

These acts were among those imputed on radical protesters who staged nearly daily mass actions against the government in the second half of last year. However, Lam and other officials have assured that the new law would not have retroactive effect, meaning, it will not include acts that were committed before it was enacted.
Thousands of protesters march toward Victoria Park in Causeway Bay to denounce new law
Also among those who could face the maximum penalty are people who lobby for sanctions against the governments of the SAR or the mainland, through the use of illegal means to “stir up hatred” against the authorities.

Likewise, those who organize, plan, implement or take part in secessionist activities face harsher penalties.

While local authorities are tasked with handling most national security cases, a mainland agency that has just been set up in Hong Kong can assume control when “complicated situations” arise because of foreign interference, when the local government is unable to enforce the law, and when there’s a serious threat to national security.

Suspects in such cases would then be tried in a mainland court, under mainland law, which prescribes death as the maximum sentence in serious offences, although it’s not clear if this penalty would apply to an offender in Hong Kong.

But even for cases heard in Hong Kong, the media and the public can be barred from attending the trial if national secrets or public order are involved, and the authority deems an open trial inappropriate.
Defiant protesters march towards Victoria Park in Causeway Bay (photo by J B)

The Secretary for Justice can also decide that certain cases involving national secrets or external forces should be heard by three judges in the High Court instead of a jury, whose safety could be put at risk, according to the law.

The Chief Executive, on the other hand, is given power to appoint local judges to preside over national security cases, but will be supervised by the central government.

Another provision specifies that staff of the new mainland agency are not under Hong Kong’s jurisdiction if they are investigating national security cases. This means even the agency’s vehicles cannot be searched by local law enforcers while carrying out their duties.

Authorities would also have the power to wiretap and put under surveillance those suspected of endangering national security.

In addition, anyone convicted of violating the new legislation would be barred from running or taking up any public office, or become a member of the Chief Executive Election Committee.

High-ranking civil servants, or those who have sworn allegiance to the SAR, including lawmakers, district councillors, government officials or public officers, Executive Council members, judges and members of the judiciary, will lose their positions immediately.

The new law will apply to everyone in Hong Kong, even non-permanent residents.

Critics of the new law, including the vice chairwoman of the Bar Association Anita Yip, have raised concerns about how its provisions will be interpreted, as there is no clear definition of the crimes covered.

Yip noted that the ultimate power of interpretation lies with the NPC’s Standing Committee, putting in serious doubt Hong Kong’s authority to interpret the law using prevailing common law practice.

She also pointed out that terms like “national security” are defined more broadly in China than in Hong Kong, and raised concern about the provision that outlaws provoking hatred among Hong Kong residents towards the central government through illegal means.

"What constitutes illegal means and what induces hatred, and, as I said hatred, how is it being established? Objective standards? Subjective standards? Ultimately I believe it is a matter of interpretation by the courts and it’s not a matter of who’s assuring you with this or that," Yip said.

But in an address earlier, CE Lam sought to allay concerns over the new law, saying it won't have any direct effects on the lives of Hong Kong people.

"It only targets an extremely small minority of offenders while the life and property as well as various legitimate basic rights and freedoms enjoyed by the overwhelming majority of citizens will be protected", she said.
Hours before the expected passage of the security law, prominent pro-democracy campaigners like student leader Joshua Wong quit organizations identified with their advocacy, while Taiwan opened an office that offered sanctuary for those facing threat.


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