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Filipino fined $2k, handed suspended jail sentence for indecent exposure

Posted on 07 August 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

The magistrate imposed a non-jail sentence to allow defendant to continue his counseling sessions

A 54-year-old Filipino designer was fined $2,000 and handed a one-month suspended jail sentence today, Aug 7, in Eastern Court after he admitted exposing his genitals to a local woman in Wanchai one evening in January.

S.F. looked meek as he was sentenced by Magistrate Bina Chainrai after he pleaded guilty to the offense.


The defendant was accompanied to the court by his wife and two teenage daughters.

He was charged with indecency in public on Mar 30, two and a half months after he was arrested for exposing his private part to the woman, identified only as X.
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The prosecution said the defendant, who works as a designer, was walking on the sidewalk outside Joint Publishing HK at 1A O’Brien Road at 7:15pm on Jan 16 when he suddenly stopped and stuck out his genitals in front of X for 6-8 seconds.

At the time, X was waiting for her boyfriend.


The woman got scared and screamed, attracting the attention of two male bystanders, one identified as a chief customs officer and a site worker, who quickly nabbed the defendant.

Police were called to the scene and they arrested the defendant. He was later released on police bail.

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The prosecution said the defendant had two previous convictions, one similar to his present offense.

The lawyer representing S.F. said his client had admitted having a problem and was undergoing counseling by a psychiatrist. The lawyer begged for a lenient sentence.

Chainrai said she was imposing a non-custodial sentence so the defendant could continue his counseling treatment.
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Infected Indonesian DH stayed in another dorm, says health officials

Posted on 06 August 2020 No comments
By The SUN

The infected helper also stayed at Sunlight employment agency's shelter in North Point
Concerns that Hong Kong could end up having the same problems with its migrant workers as Singapore were raised today, as health officials reported 95 confirmed and 60 preliminary positive cases of Covid-19, including an Indonesian domestic worker.

Among the four imported cases was a Filipina domestic worker who tested positive for the disease on the 12th day of her quarantine, which meant she had flown into Hong Kong one day before tighter screening for travelers from the Philippines came into force.

The three others were returnees from India.


The new cases come just one day after an Indonesian migrant worker who tested positive for the disease was revealed to have stayed at two boarding houses in the two weeks before her diagnosis, sparking fears of widespread contamination.

It now turns out that there was at least one other shelter where the infected Indonesian helper had stayed, according to Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection at the daily press briefing today, Aug 6.

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Dr Chuang identified the third dormitory as one run by the Sunlight Employment Agency on King’s Road in North Point, where the infected Indonesian had stayed, along with about 30 other domestic helpers, between Jul 21 and 22.

From there, the helper moved to another boarding house on Lockhart Road in Wanchai, run by KL Home Care Ltd. During her stay there between Jul 23 to 26, there were 28 other helpers.
Between Jul 29 to Jul 31, the Indonesian stayed in a unit run by the Perfect Maid Centre at 48 Yee Wo Street in Causeway Bay, along with four other helpers. They have all been quarantined, along with five staff who stayed on the same floor and shared a toilet with them.

The Indonesian helper developed symptoms on Aug 1 and was confirmed positive four days later.

Dr Chuang corrected her statement yesterday that all the 28 other helpers who were at the KL Home Care premises with the infected patient had moved to their respective employers.

KL Home Care's shelter in Wanchai, where the infected Indonesian had stayed with 28 other helpers (RTHK photo)
Chuang said only one had moved out, and she will be included among those isolated, along with her employer’s family.

Still unknown are the whereabouts of the helper between Jul 26 and 28. Chuang said the language barrier had made it difficult to get all the information from the patient.

As for the other Indonesian helper who tested preliminary positive, Chuang said the patient left her previous employer on Jul 30 and stayed with about four to six other migrant workers in a dormitory run by Anika Employment Service Centre at Kin On Commercial Building in Sheung Wan.

On Aug 1, she moved to her new employer, but three days later she developed a fever, and she was taken to Tseung Kwan O hospital, where she tested preliminary positive. She has since been moved to Holiday Inn Express in the district to await her test result .

Chuang sad the CHP will look for her previous employer and other close contacts.

Asked about the possibility of transmission in the temporary shelters, she said: “I am quite worried about the boarding houses as they are not spacious and they all share a kitchen and toilet.”

But she would not be drawn into comparing the situation with the massive outbreak in migrant workers’ dormitories in Singapore, which continues to this day. Of the 908 new cases reported in the island state today, for example, all but three involved migrant workers.
Chuang said that “hopefully, we can control the situation in Hong Kong.”

Neither was she swayed by a suggestion from a reporter that employers should be allowed to keep their FDHs at home even during their day-off, saying that if everyone followed the regulations on gathering, the surge in cases could be curbed.

She also did not comment on an expert’s suggestion of mass testing for all FDHs, saying she’d let government officials decide on this. But she agreed that taking environmental samples from the shelters where the infected maid had stayed was a good idea.

Of the 91 local cases today, Chaun said 52 were linked to previous infections. Most, or 46 of the linked cases, again came from family gatherings, or relatives and friends having meals together.

The other cases included two linked to King Fok elderly home in Sham Shui Po, and one to Cornwall care home in Tuen Mun.
Two more patients died within the past 24 hours, raising the death toll to 44.

The first was a patient who died after testing preliminary positive yesterday, and was subsequently classified as a confirmed case. The second was another elderly patient who passed away at Tuen Mun hospital at 1:26 this afternoon.

A total of 1,204 patients remain in 18 public hospitals and at the treatment facilities in Lei Yue Mun and AsiaWorld-Expo. Of these, 39 are in critical condition, 57 in serious condition, while 1,108 are stable.
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OFW group gets $30k grant to aid stranded and quarantined HK migrants

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By The SUN

Social Justice and Soap Cycling members pack hygiene kits for stranded migrant workers 

HER Fund, a community women’s organization, has approved a $29,800 grant to finance Social Justice for Migrant Workers’ program to provide food, cash aid and workshops for quarantined and stranded foreign domestic workers.

SJMW founder and The SUN contributor Marites Palma said the funding group approved the grant after studying her proposal to help needy migrant workers.

  
Palma submitted her project proposal titled “Support for FDH in Hong Kong who are quarantined and stranded during the pandemic” after seeing that hundreds of domestic workers who lost their jobs because of the pandemic were left stranded in the city.
HER Fund found Palma’s proposal in accord with its job of promoting marginal and grassroots women’s rights and improving their living conditions through funding, ability training and resource linkage.
Palma said the grant covers aid distribution starting on Aug 15 and ending on May 14 next year. It will be carried out in collaboration with Share Hong Kong and United Filipinos in Hong Kong.
 
Palma speaks at a women empowerment forum organized by the Equal Opportunities Commission
Since February this year, thousands of displaced helpers had been left stranded in Hong Kong because of frequent flight cancellations to and from Manila, apart from the strict lockdowns that halted domestic flights around the country.


SJWM began extending help when it was made aware of the problems faced by dozens of helpers who needed to undergo quarantine after returning from vacation in the Philippines.

Many of the workers appealed for food, as their employers did not provide them enough sustenance during their 14-day quarantine. Hong Kong’s labour laws oblige employers to pay a food allowance, but it’s hardly enough to cover all their meals during the quarantine, not to mention that they are not allowed to go out even just to buy food.

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Together with other migrant workers organizations such as Global Alliance HK, La Union Federation, Panay Overseas Workers Association, Taipo Domestic Workers Group, Guardians Republican Int'l Inc., Filipino Nurses Association HK, SJWM decided to take action.

Later, non-government organizations such as the Mission for Migrant Workers, Asia Pacific Mission for Migrants and Soap Cycling, along with some Hong Kong residents, joined the endeavor.

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Many donated cash, which totaled nearly $10,000, and some contributed food packs, home-cooked meals and groceries that were given to the needy domestic workers.
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Philippines plunges into recession, overtakes Indonesia as country with most infections in SEA

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By The SUN

The Philippines now has more coronavirus infections than Indonesia, whose population is twice as big
The Philippine economy fell into recession for the first time in 39 years after shrinking 16.5% year-on-year in the second quarter due to the prolonged and strict coronavirus lockdown.

The April-June contraction was unveiled by the Philippine Statistics Authority today, Aug 6, as the Department of Health reported 3,561 new coronavirus cases, two days after registering the all-time daily high of 6,352  on Tuesday. 

The overall tally of 119,460 has made the Philippines overtake Indonesia as the country with the highest number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in Southeasr Asia.
Of the country’s total cases, 50,473 are active, according to the latest DOH data.

Metro Manila registered the most number of new cases at 2,041, followed by Laguna with 222, Cebu with 221, Cavite with 100, and Rizal with 81.

There were an additional 569 recoveries, bringing the total to 66,837. But the country’s Covid-19 death toll rose to 2,150 after the DOH added 28 new fatalities.

The country’s gross domestic product, the final value of goods and services it produced during the past three months, fell way below the 9% contraction forecast in a Reuters poll, and was far worse than the 0.7% slump in the first quarter.
Seasonally adjusted GDP fell 15.2% in the second quarter from the January-March level.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez and other Malacañang officials acknowledged the adverse economic impact of the lockdowns, but said the government took the difficult move to save lives and protect communities.


“The government did not shirk from the equally important responsibility of providing much-needed relief to the most vulnerable, maintaining fundamental services, and carrying out measures to keep the economy afloat,” Dominguez said.

He said that without continued and increased public-sector spending, especially on infrastructure, public health, and social protection, the economy would have fared much worse.
Presidential Communications Secretary Martin Andanar said the economic contraction of was expected by the country’s economic managers.

But he said the lockdown and community quarantine was necessary to prevent the collapse of the healthcare system and assist frontline healthcare workers.

Two doctors at the Philippine General Hospital fell asleep on the lobby floor from sheer exhaustion
The economic hit from the pandemic could worsen with the government reimposing a virtual lockdown in Metro Manila and nearby provinces for two weeks from Tuesday, amid record increases in Covid-19 cases.

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Frontline medical workers had asked for a time-out, saying they were made to bear the brunt of the surge in cases, while the government failed to provide a clear policy direction on how it intends to curb the contagion.
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Four locals arrested in loan shark ring targeting Filipino helpers

Posted on No comments
.By The SUN
 
More than 100 OFWs were made to sign up  for loans with the syndicate at 195% interest rate

Hong Kong police say they have released on bail two local men and two local women who were arrested in a crackdown yesterday, Aug 5, on a loan shark syndicate that preyed on Filipino domestic helpers coming to this city.

A police spokeswoman said charges have not yet been filed against the four as investigations into their money laundering and loan sharking operations are ongoing.


The four, aged 52 to 74, were arrested in a police swoop in North Point, Wong Tai Sin and Western. They were instructed to report to the police in early September, she said.

But the police did not give the names of the arrested persons, the lending companies they represented in Hong Kong, and their partner agencies in the Philippines.
The syndicate’s partner finance companies in the Philippines reportedly lent money totaling $23 million to more than 100 successful job applicants to pay for their agency fee and related services such as medical and training costs.

The workers paid back the loans to the Hong Kong syndicate in monthly installments at excessive interest rates as high as 195% a year, more than triple the 60% legal ceiling.
Under Hong Kong laws, lending firms that charge more than a 60% are liable to a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail and a $5 million fine if convicted. Employment agencies are also prohibited from charging their recruits more than 10% of their first monthly salary.

In the Philippines it is illegal for employment agencies to charge placement fees from job applicants. But some agencies force the workers to go to lending companies and take out loans to pay for their services, masked as training and other fees.
  
Police started investigating after 17 OFWs complained about being charged up to $14k a month as repayment
Police began investigating this particular case when 17 workers who were made to pay $6,000 to $14,000 monthly within three to six months of their arrival reported the illegal operation.
“The syndicate signed contracts with the helpers through finance companies in the Philippines. They borrowed between $4,000 and $8,000 in pesos,” local media reports quoted Chief Inspector Tang Hoi-ting of the narcotics bureau’s financial investigation team as saying.

Tang said the syndicate did not inform the workers they would be paying such a high interest rate when lending the money.

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Officers seized computers, cash and receipts during the raids and froze $5 million that the syndicate held in a bank account.
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