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Man in alley video scandal to be charged with rape

Posted on 21 July 2020 No comments
By The SUN

The report in the Chinese-language online site shows the alley where the alleged rape happened

A man, described in a Chinese online media site as an African recognizance holder, will appear in Eastern Court tomorrow, charged with the alleged rape of a Filipina domestic helper on Jul 1.

The alleged offence, which happened on the exit staircase of a building on Li Yuen Street West, was captured on video by an unknown person, and was then freely circulated online.


The 38-year-old Filipina who was reportedly drunk during the time of the incident, went to the Central Police District a few days later to complain about the alleged rape, as well as the uploading of the video on the internet.

The newspaper report said the 36-year-old suspect was arrested in Yuen Long on Friday, Jul 18, following an investigation by the Police Anti-Triad Squad.

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The Philippine Consulate says it will extend assistance to the alleged victim.


Sickly maid grateful, but says she doesn’t need cash aid from fellow workers

Posted on 20 July 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

Melinda gets off her sick bed to visit OWWA and thank them for their help

A sacked sickly Filipina domestic worker who has generated overwhelming sympathy after The SUN wrote about her $51,000 hospital bill has rejected an offer by fellow helpers to raise funds for her.

Melinda, not her real name, said on Sunday, Jul 19, that she was deeply touched by the outpouring of support from the OFWs, but declined their offer as she had applied for a waiver of her bill at Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

She is now awaiting the approval of her application for fee waiver following her interview by the head of the hospital’s Medical Social Services Unit last Friday, Jul 17.


“Sir, for my sake please make it clear na nailapit ko po yung documents ko sa mismong head ng Social Services, kasi hinintay po ako talaga for interview niyon. Bukas ko po malalaman ang approval ng Social Services po,” Melinda said in a message.

But she extended her thanks to the dozens of several individuals and groups, including the Philippine Alliance of Hong Kong, who offered to raise money for her medical bill.

Many offers of help were posted in the comments section of the article on her plight that came out in The SUN, and generated more than 2,000 “likes” on Facebook. Several others sent personal messages asking for her bank account or online account number.


Today, Jul 20, Melinda went to see Welfare Officer Virsie Tamayao, who helped her apply for the fee waiver, visa extension, and financial assistance from the Akap program for displaced overseas Filipino workers of the Department of Labor and Employment.

Tamayao said the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration would also reimburse Melinda’s visa extension cost.
 
Tamayao's generous food donation overwhelmed Melinda

Earlier, Owwa also sent food packs to Melinda, who is resting under doctor’s orders in a hostel in Tsim Sha Tsui.
Tamayao earlier expressed misgivings about the fundraising for Melinda, saying she was confident the fee waiver that they sought would be granted.

This is in line with what Hong Kong legislator Fernando Cheung said in an earlier interview with The SUN, that public hospitals would not refuse to treat terminated migrant workers, and would not pursue them for an unpaid bill incurred while they were out of job.
Melinda was confined for five nights in the Yau Ma Tei hospital after she ran a fever, experienced heavy bleeding and suffered fainting spells. She was diagnosed with low hemoglobin levels and with a pelvic infection

During her stay, she underwent various procedures and treatment including CT scan, ultrasound, blood transfusion, blood tests and various other laboratory examinations.

Melinda reached out to The SUN for help, and she was linked up with Tamayao.

    

Health officials warn of virtual lockdown as 73 new Covid-19 cases reported

Posted on No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Drs Chuang and Ho at today's press briefing: drastic measures may be taken if hospitals are overwhelmed

Hong Kong health officials are warning of stricter measures, including a stay-at-home order or a virtual lockdown, if the number of Covid-19 cases continues to surge.

The warning came as 73 new confirmed cases were reported today, Jul 20, the second highest daily toll after yesterday’s record of 108 cases. Of these cases, 66 are locally acquired, and seven are imported, including one Filipino seafarer.

The first to sound out the alarm was top microbiologist Yuen Kwok-yung who said in a radio interview that Hong Kong may have to go into a virtual lockdown if the number of coronavirus cases continues to increase in the next one or two weeks.
He described the measure as “close to a lockdown” of the entire city.

At today’s Covid-19 press briefing, Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection did not discount this possibility.

“If the cases increase exponentially, then of course we will be overwhelmed and we will  need to take new measures,” Chuang said.


She said today’s decline in the number of cases from Monday’s record tally cannot be seen as a downward trend as they reflect the situation in the past two to three weeks because of the incubation period of the disease.

Of the seven imported cases, four involved seafarers, including one who flew in from the Philippines, another from Korea and two from Qatar. The others were a pilot who flew in from Japan, another traveler from Ehiopia, and another from Kazakhstan.

Among today’s local cases, 39 are linked to previous infections, including 24 that spread among family members, a new one at a table tennis center in Yau Ma Tei and at the Eye Centre in Tuen Mun. 
But a number of new infections are causing concern, including a doctor who runs a clinic in Causeway Bay, and had visited an elderly home in North Point; and a patient who tested positive after being put in a ward with 10 other patients following an appendectomy.

Several clusters of people who dined at restaurants were also in list, including three more family members who had a meal at ChiuChow Garden at MetroPlaza in Kwai Fong, making a total of nine infections; and six patrons of  Victoria Harbour restaurant at the Metropark Hotel in Mong Kok.
 
6 of today's cases dined at Victoria Harbour restaurant in MetroPark Hotel in Mongkok

There were also several cases linked to the Fulum restaurant in Tuen Mun Central Square where a birthday party was held, and about 20 tables were booked.

Dr Linda Yu of the Hospital Authority, meanwhile urged people to go to private laboratories if they want to get themselves tested for the disease and are asymptomatic, so as not to put a strain on the public health system. 
“Those without symptoms but want to be tested must approach private laboratories recognized by the government…the A&E (accident and emergency) sections of public hospitals will only provide tests for patients with symptoms,” she said.

Yu said the Lei Yue Mun holiday camp is being readied to take in patients if the public hospitals are filled to capacity in the next two weeks. She said the temporary hospital should be ready in 72 hours should the need arises.

As of noon today, she said 562 confirmed cases are in isolation rooms in 14 hospitals, 23 of them in critical condition, and 13 in serious condition. A total of 1,301 have been discharged, after eight more recoveries today.

The death toll remains at 12.






More displaced workers queue up for help at OWWA

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao
 
Displaced workers line up to get financial help or a slot in confirmed flights arranged by the Consulate

About three dozen dismissed Filipino domestic workers lined up this morning, Jul 20, at the Philippine Overseas Labor Office to apply for emergency cash assistance or seek a slot on the next flight home arranged by the Consulate.

Most of the workers who were gathered in the Polo conference room said their contracts had been terminated by their employers more than a month ago. Some are still looking for prospective employers, while the others are resigned to go home.

At least one helper said she initiated the termination of her contract because she could not withstand her working conditions. Luckily, she has found a new employer and is flying home to see her family before starting her new job.
By noon, more than 30 workers had already approached the Polo and the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration for the DOLE Akap cash aid and the flight registration.

At about the same time, displaced OFWs continued to trickle into the premises enquiring about the $300 financial help that Owwa gives to those who don’t have money for food or transportation.

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But it’s not clear who is entitled to the so-called “ayuda” as there are no published guidelines, although a team within Owwa reportedly decides on who should get it.
 
Many are stuck in HK because of repeated cancellations of their flights to Manila
The others in the queue were enquiring about the group flights arranged by the Consulate and Owwa to ensure that those who want to fly home don’t get stuck in Hong Kong indefinitely because of frequent flight cancellations.

Among those at Owwa’s offices on the 16th floor this morning were two elderly women who said they had worked in Hong Kong for more than three decades.


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Rita, a 62-year-old helper with driving duties, was terminated by her employer after she was booked by the police for careless driving. She booked a flight home on Aug 3 but it was cancelled.

She said she should have been on the flight that left this morning but she failed to pick up the phone when Owwa called to inform her of her booking. She is now hoping to get onto the next flight tentatively set for Jul 23.

Her voyage home on the next special flight home would end her 31 years of working in Hong Kong.


Another long-timer in the city is 65-year-old Manang, who was terminated on Jun 15 when she shouted back at her British male employer who berated her. Manang said he was the worst employer she ever had since arriving here in 1984.

“Dito na ako nagdalaga at tumanda,” the Ilocana from Tarlac, who would not give her name, said in jest.

This morning, Manang was at Polo to accompany three other Ilocana helpers who were also dismissed by their employers and were seeking the US$200 Akap financial assistance for OFWs displaced because of the coronavirus pandemic.

“Nabigyan na ako ng DOLE Akap,” she said, adding that she had also received food allowance from Owwa.

Manang and her three companions are staying for free in a Christian shelter in Jordan where they cook their own food while they await a new employer to sign them up, or when they, too, will have to fly home. 


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HK’s highest daily tally of 108 new Covid-19 cases include 15 Filipinos

Posted on 19 July 2020 No comments
By The SUN
Today's record cases came from various districts across Hong Kong

Hong Kong recorded its highest daily tally of 108 confirmed Covid-19 cases, today, Jul 19, bringing the city’s total infections to 1,886.

The new cases include an unprecedented 15 Filipinos who recently arrived from Manila. Ten of them are domestic workers, and three are seafarers. The visa status of the two others was not mentioned.

Another record was the 83 local infections among today’s cases.

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The all-time high was reached in just eight hours, after the Health Department adjusted its cut-off reporting time to midnight, instead of 4pm the next day, to cope with the sudden spike in cases.

This means that the 108 cases were confirmed only between 4pm and 12 midnight on Saturday. Today's total tally will be reported at midnight tonight.

Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection warned at today’s press briefing that the local medical system could collapse if the situation did not improve.

Tinghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love

She also said that the number of confirmed cases could go up sharply within today, as she was aware of about 60 more confirmed or preliminary cases detected since after midnight Saturday.

Another concern is the apparently “stronger” or more infectious strain of the coronavirus that is going around, compared to the one that caused a spike in infections last March.

Chuang said that’s because she has seen cases in which the virus managed to infect another during short contacts of about a few minutes, involving someone without a mask on.
 
Chuang warns a more infectious coronavirus strain appears to be causing the surge in cases

Of today’s cases, 48 are of unknown source, further igniting the worry that many asymptomatic super spreaders are passing the virus around.

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The number of imported cases was also up sharply at 25. Apart from the 15 Filipinos who flew in from Manila, the other infected travelers came from Japan, Pakistan, India, Bahrain and the United States.

Chuang said information on two other travelers were still pending although one appears to be an airline crew from Japan who might have just transited in Hong Kong.

The CHP official said 35 of the local cases were linked to previous or today’s cases, and that most of them are family members, fellow diners or fellow mahjong players.

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Chuang said there were cluster cases among the new infections. Some were linked to the Windsor Restaurant or Green River Restaurant in the epidemic hotspot Tsz Wan Shan, and family members who had eaten or played mahjong together.

One more case was linked to three previously confirmed patients who had played at a tennis centre in San Po Kong.

Of the untraceable cases, three involved taxi drivers and an employee of a frozen meat shop in a market in Hung Hom.

She reminded people who go to wet markets to wash their hands regularly, especially after they touch produce or pay with cash, because the virus may remain in the environment.

“Paper money is something that you cannot cleanse with alcohol, so after touching it, try not to touch your eyes or noses or mouths, and wash your hands quickly,” she said.

Chuang said that the new patients live in different districts, from the epicenter Tsz Wan Shan, to Siu Sai Wan and Yuen Long.


Filcom leader says migrants warned by police to follow gathering restrictions

Posted on No comments
By The SUN
Chater Road today was relatively empty, but not the adjacent Edinburgh Place where the police issued warnings

 
A longtime Filipino community leader has called on his fellow migrant workers to strictly observe the four-to-a-group rule on public gathering in Hong Kong, or risk prosecution.

Eman Villanueva, chair of Bayan Hong Kong and Macau, said he received reports shortly after 3pm today, Jul 19,  that police had rounded up a number of Filipinos near the General Post Office in Central, after taking pictures and videos of them violating the social distancing rule.
He said the police took down the names and HK ID numbers of the violators as a warning, but did not make any arrests. Police confirmed this separately to The SUN in response to a query.

Villanueva said that had they been arrested, violators would have been asked to pay an outright fine of $2,000 if they did not wish to contest the charge, or brought to court where they will have the chance to defend themselves, but if found guilty, could face a fine of up to $25,000 and imprisonment of up to six months.
 
At nearby WorldWide Plaza, shops were again packed with Filipino shoppers
But he said that migrant workers face an even tougher sanction.
Sa mga migrant donestic workers, malamang magiging dahilan din ito para ma-deport o hindi maka renew ng kontrata,” he warned in a Facebook post.
(For migrant workers, this could mean them being deported or denied a renewal of their contracts).

Villanueva added: “Kaya muli, paalala sa lahat na mag observe ng social distancing lalo na sa mga pampublikong lugar, palaging magsuot ng face mask at magbaon ng alcohol spray o hand sanitizer.

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(So again, a reminder to all to observe social distancing especially in public places, (and) to always wear a face mask and bring along alocohol spray or hand sanitizers)


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