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Stranded pregnant Filipina finds adoptive home while waiting to give birth

Posted on 04 September 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao
 
The pregnant Filipina was terminated before
she could inform her employer about her condition
A 26-year-old Filipina domestic helper who found out she’s pregnant after losing her job is stranded in Hong Kong due to the pandemic, but has found a warm adoptive home and family as she anticipates her baby’s birth this month.

Just a few months back, she was distressed by her sudden loss of employment and unexpected pregnancy that were compounded by her boyfriend’s refusal to recognize paternity, Alexandria said in a video story on the website of PathFinders Hong Kong.

A kind, supportive friend led the expectant mother to PathFinders, a nongovernmental organization that lends support to vulnerable migrant women and their children.


The NGO offered a shelter to Alexandria, who said her baby is due on Sept 27.

Alexandria said her contract was terminated by her employer after nearly one and a half years serving the household, but did not give the reason for her dismissal.

“It was my first time to work in Hong Kong. My employer didn’t know that I was pregnant. This is my first time to have a baby, so I didn’t know that I was pregnant,” Alexandria said.


She said it was only on Mar 3, when her monthly period was delayed, that she went to see a doctor for a checkup. The finding that she was pregnant jolted her.

Alexandria said she was too confused and didn’t know what to do. Initially, she didn’t tell her mother about her condition, afraid that it would make her mad.

But a friend advised her to tell her mother the truth, and was surprised by the outcome.


“So, I told my Mom and she said she was happy for me and for my baby,” Alexandria said.

Acceptance and forgiveness by her mother lifted Alexandria’s spirits. “I am happy and I think that the baby is a blessing,” she said.

Alexandria said she wanted to go back to the Philippines and give birth there, but she was prevented from doing so by the Covid-19 lockdown in the country.

PathFinders lecture to migrant mothers about their rights 

Kuma Chow, senior communications manager at the NGO, said Alexandria had obtained a recognizance paper from the Immigration Department so she could stay legally in Hong Kong while she couldn’t fly home due to the lockdown and her being too pregnant.

Except for the guarantee that they won’t get arrested for overstaying in Hong Kong, migrant mothers on recognizance still find the going tough as they are not eligible for public healthcare and are prohibited from taking up work.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love

“Costs are top of their worries very often,” Chow said. “Generally, we help clients by referral to Equal Justice Hong Kong for legal assistance, including paternity claims or labor disputes.”

Chow said Alexandria participates in PathFinders’ educational workshops such as one on prenatal yoga and has a case officer assigned to follow her situation.  

https://bit.ly/2YNSLAH


For now, Alexandria is focused on her impending motherhood and her eventual return home to her own family.

“Maybe after the lockdown, I can go back home and take care of my baby,” she said.


New Covid-19 cases include 6 from universal testing and 8 new ones

Posted on 03 September 2020 No comments
By The SUN
 
4 of the 6 positive cases from the universal testing are previous infections (promo photo)


Six out of the first 128,000 people tested under Hong Kong’s mass screening for Covid-19 tested positive yesterday, according to the city’s health officials. But four of the patients were previously infected and were not considered as new cases.

These are separate from the eight new cases reported today, Sept. 3, which included a 63-year-old woman who was found infected only after she died alone in her house in Shek Kip Mei.

They brought the city’s total tally to 4,839, but with only 279 still being treated in hospital.

Director of Health Constance Chan reported the initial result from the universal community testing which kicked off on Tuesday, Sept. 1, at today’s press briefing.


She said that as of 1pm today, about 850,000 had already registered for the mass screening. Of these, 370,000 had already been tested, but most of the samples are still being analysed in laboratories.

Dr Chan repeated the call for the public to join the scheme “to identify the silent carriers, (or) the asymptomatic patients to cut off the transmission chain in the community.”
Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection said that the four detected as infected from the universal screening had just been released from hospital after testing negative for the virus, and were found to have developed antibodies.


Three of them volunteered to be tested again to get reassurance, while the fourth signed up at the request of her company, prior to her being allowed to resume work.

The two new cases included a 63-year-old man who had stopped working in June, and mostly stayed at his home in Kwai Tsing with his wife and other family members. He sometimes visited the wet markets in Sham Shui Po and Mei Foo.

A pattern has emerged of elderly patients whose main activities include going to wet markets

The other patient is a 22-year-old woman who is unemployed and lives with her family in Siu Hong estate in Tuen Mun. She said she had dined from time to time during the incubation period, but could not remember the details.


Chuang said the patients will be given case numbers tomorrow, when they will be included in the list of new infections.

Of today’s cases, only one is imported. It involves a seafarer who flew into Hong Kong from India via Doha, Qatar.

Four are of unknown source, including the woman who lived alone and was found positive during a post-mortem.

https://bit.ly/2YNSLAH


Chuang said inquiries revealed that the woman had consulted a doctor on Aug 28, complaining of swollen legs. The patient was diagnosed with hypertension and referred to a specialist, but she did not go.

Her family members called police when they could not contact her, and she was found dead at home. Lung tissue sample taken from her body during an autopsy at a public mortuary tested positive for Covid-19.

The three untraceable cases include a 66-year-old man who sold Chinese medicine in Yau Ma Tei and lives with his wife in Sau Mau Ping; a 74-year-old woman who lives in Oi Man Estate in Homantin; and a 63-year-old woman who lives in Shek Kip Mei.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love

Chuang said all the cases fitted the usual pattern of elderly people, mostly retirees, who did not socialize much, and whose activities mainly consisted of buying food in wet markets. While wet markets may not be the source of the infection, she said the large number of people who gather there could be a risk factor.

The linked cases included two family members, and another carer at Hong Chi hostel for the mentally disabled in Lei Muk Shue, Tsuen Wan, where more than 20 cases have been detected so far.

Today’s eight cases matched the previous day’s number, which was the lowest since July 3.

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New illegal recruitment charge filed against FDH & no-show employer

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao
Only Biscocho was in court today to face 20 criminal charges 
Only Biscocho was in court today
Another complainant against two alleged illegal recruiters, one of them a Filipina domestic helper, has stepped forward, prompting prosecution to ask for an adjournment of the case during a hearing at District Court today, Sept 3.

Only defendant Marijane Biscocho, 42, was in court today, as her employer, Lennis Ebrahim, 56, was said to be sick, according to her lawyer.


Each faces a charge of money laundering and 19 counts of applying a false trade description when they offered allegedly non-existent jobs in Hong Kong and Macau to several Filipino jobseekers who paid between $3,000 to $10,000.

Judge K.W. Kwok adjourned the case until Oct 13 and ordered Biscocho sent back to custody.
He also ordered Ebrahim to go to the District Court within seven days to complete her bail application. At the same time he told Ebrahim’s lawyer sternly to make sure his client appears in the next hearing.


 “She should attend District Court and prepare an undertaking to surrender herself to court custody at every hearing,” Kwok said.

He said Ebrahim can either apply to have her bail extended, or make a new bail application within the next seven days.

The two defendants were supposed to enter their plea today, but this was again postponed because of Ebrahim’s absence, and the filing of a new complaint against them.

The prosecution told Judge Kwok that because of the new complaint by an alleged victim, investigators needed more time to consolidate the cases.

On the money laundering charge, Biscocho and Ebrahim are accused of depositing $127,000 in a Hang Seng Bank account and $510,500 in an HSBC account between 2018 and 2019, the sums being proceeds from their illegal acts.

https://bit.ly/2YNSLAH


Separately, Biscocho is charged with breaching her condition of stay by working for Ebrahim’s WHT Consulting Co, a recruitment firm in Kwun Tong, between Oct 1, 2018 and Sept 17 last year while on domestic helper visa.

A second Filipina helper, Ninfa Lumatac, was accused by the complainants as one of those who lured them to pay for jobs as gardeners, drivers and printers in Hong Kong and Macau that turned out to be non-existent.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love

The prosecution later said Lumatac had escaped to Macau, then to the Philippines, before the authorities could act on the complaints.
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Rescued DH found to have stage 4 ovarian cancer

Posted on 02 September 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

Merle Bonagua, before and after her cancer diagnosis

A 52-year-old Filipina domestic helper got the shock of her life recently when she was told she had stage 4 ovarian cancer that had already spread to her stomach.

The news came as a further blow to Merle Bonagua, who had been at wits’ end for months, trying to find out why she had lost so much weight and suffered constantly from abdominal pain.

Bonagua learned about her illness only on Aug 24, a few days after she was rescued from her employers’ house in Tseung Kwan O by the founder and members of an online group called HKOFW, which enlisted the help of the police.
Before this, she  had appealed online for help to go for a checkup because her employers allegedly objected to her going to the hospital.

Despite the initial shock from the diagnosis, Bonagua, a single mother who supports two grandchildren, says she now feels rested.

Mas maayos na po ang pakiramdam ko ngayon,” (I feel much better now), Bonagua said from her sick bed at Tseung Kwan O Hospital today, Sept. 2.

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Two days earlier, the emaciated maid posted on Facebook a picture of herself sitting on a wheelchair and holding a red backpack on her lap in the lobby of Queen Elizabeth Hospital. She said she was there to consult an oncologist for her treatment.

Bonagua said she was accompanied to the hospital by Welfare Officer Virsie Tamayao of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration and attaché Arnel Deluna of the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section.
 
Bonagua being wheeled by Welof Tamayao in Queen Elizabeth Hospital


From there she was transported back to TKO Hospital by the Consulate officers and her HKOFW friends, where she will undergo more tests before her next appointment with the oncologist at Queen Elizabeth.

The maid from Polillo, Quezon, has lost so much weight that she looks very much older than her age.
She said she lost so much weight because she was given little food since she joined her employers eight months ago. Previously, she worked for 17 years for her first employer in Hong Kong.

Bonagua said she began feeling unwell about four months ago. When she complained about pain in her belly, her female employer from mainland China reportedly gave her the card of a private doctor in Tseung Kwan O and told her to go there for consultation.

The helper said she went to see the doctor on May 9 and was told that she had gastroenteritis.
When the pain persisted, Bonagua said she asked to go to the hospital repeatedly, but her female employer always objected saying, “Hospital Covid, Covid, Covid!”

She said the employer gave her another doctor’s card and a video on how to go to his clinic. But each time she tried to go, her female employer allegedly ordered her to do so many tasks that by the time she was finished doing them, the clinic was already closed.

The male employer reportedly allowed her to go to the doctor on her Sunday day-off, but the clinic she was meant to go was closed on that day as a precaution against coronavirus infection.

Bonagua said as days passed, she became more and more intimidated by the female employer until a friend linked her up with HKOFW, which ended up rescuing her.

Gyms, massage parlors to reopen, but 2-per-group rule remains

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

Only 2 people are allowed to sit together in public, including restaurants
The government is set to further relax social distancing measures put in place to combat the spread of the coronavirus by allowing certain premises to reopen, and to further extend the dine-in hours in restaurants by an hour, or up to 10pm.

The more relaxed rules will be implemented for a week from this Friday, Sept. 4, until Sept. 10, and may be extended or restricted further, depending on Hong Kong’s infection rate.

However, the ban on group gatherings of more than two people will remain, as well as the requirement for everyone to wear a mask in all public places, whether indoor or outdoor, unless they are engaged in a strenuous physical activity.


Among the business establishments that will reopen are fitness centers, massage parlors and indoor and outdoor sports premises where little physical contact is involved, subject to certain restrictions.

Previously, cinemas and beauty parlors were allowed to reopen, but must still operate within set guidelines, like taking in customers only up to 50% of their capacity; and a strict observance of physical distancing inside the premises.

The sports facilities that will be allowed to reopen include pool and billiard halls, bowling alleys, tennis and badminton courts, golf facilities, both indoor and outdoor; and all water sports.

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Those that will remain shut are amusement and games centres, swimming pools, party rooms, nightclubs, karaoke bars and mahjong places.

Live performance and dancing in any food establishment will still be forbidden.

A statement from the government said relaxing the restrictions slowly will allow the public “to exercise to maintain physical and mental health” so that they will be better equipped to combat the epidemic.

The details of the latest gathering measures are as follows:
Only those engaged in strenuous activities like jogging are allowed to take off their masks

Catering business
--------------------

(1) From 10pm to 4.59am of the subsequent day, save for specific premises (like staff canteen) restaurants or other food establishments must stop selling or supplying food or drink for consumption within their premises. The said businesses may still sell or supply food and/or drink for takeaway services and deliveries. A notice should be put up at the entrance announcing the restrictions.


(2) The number of customers at any catering premises at any one time must not exceed 50 per cent of the normal seating capacity of the premises. No more than two persons may be seated together at one table within any catering premises.

(3) Tables available for use or being used by customers within any catering premises must be arranged in a way to ensure there is a distance of at least 1.5 metres or partition(s) which could serve as an effective buffer between one table and another table at the premises.

(4) Any premises (commonly known as bar or pub) that is exclusively or mainly used for the sale or supply of intoxicating liquors as defined in section 53(1) of the Dutiable Commodities Ordinance (Cap. 109) for consumption in that premises must be closed. Any part of a catering premises that is exclusively or mainly used for the sale or supply of such intoxicating liquors for consumption in that part must be closed.

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(5) Live performance and dancing must not be allowed in any catering premises. All karaoke and mahjong-tin kau activities carried on at any catering premises must also be suspended. Other requirements and restrictions in relation to catering business premises would remain in effect, including wearing a mask at all the time within any catering premises except when the person is consuming food or drink; conducting body temperature screening for all persons entering the premises; and providing hand sanitisers, etc.

Live performances are still not allowed
Scheduled premises
-----------------------

(6) The following scheduled premises under Cap. 599F may be open subject to relevant requirements and restrictions:

(a) Fitness Centre: The measures include that any person in the indoor sports premises is required to wear a mask all the time except when having a shower; no more than four persons may be allowed at each fitness station, machine and equipment; and each group training or class must consist of no more than four persons including the coach, etc.;

(b) Place of amusement: The measures include that any person in the place of amusement is required to wear a mask all the time except when having a shower; no more than four persons may be allowed to play at each billiard table in billiard rooms or each lane in public bowling alleys; and any ice skating rink must be closed, etc.;

(c) Cinema: The measures include that tickets to be sold and seats to be occupied of each house for film screening must not exceed 50 per cent of the seating capacity of the house; seating must be arranged in a way that no more than two consecutive seats in the same row may be occupied; no eating or drinking inside a house is allowed; and cleaning and disinfection of each house must be conducted after each screening, etc.;

(d) Beauty parlour and massage establishment: All staff must wear protective gears such as masks and face shield/goggles all the time when providing services to customers and the protective gears have to be changed or sanitised after service is provided to a customer; customers may only be served upon appointment; and no more than two persons may be allowed in each partitioned service area, etc.;

(e) Club-house: Amusement game centre, bathhouse, party room, club or nightclub, karaoke establishment, mahjong-tin kau premise and swimming pool must be closed. Catering premises must operate in accordance with the above restrictions and requirements stipulated for catering business, including the requirement to cease dine-in services during specific periods. Fitness centre, place of amusement, cinema, beauty parlour and massage establishment as well as the specified indoor and outdoor sports premises may also be open subject to compliance with the respective restrictions and requirements applicable to the premises; and

(f) Sports Premises:

(i) Some of indoor sports premises (namely badminton courts, table tennis halls, indoor bowling greens and bowling alleys, snooker and billiard rooms, tennis courts, indoor shooting ranges, golf driving ranges and practice greens, golf simulator rooms and climbing walls): The measures include that any person within the indoor sports premises is required to wear a mask all the time, except when having a shower; and each group must consist of no more than four persons, etc.; and

(ii) Some of the outdoor sports premises (namely athletic tracks in sports grounds, tennis courts and tennis practice courts, golf courses, golf driving ranges and practice greens, bowling greens, shooting ranges, archery ranges, cycling parks, horse riding schools, radio-controlled model aircraft flying fields and sea activities centres for water sports including canoeing, kayaking, sailing, yachting, windsurfing, rowing, dragonboating, water-skiing, stand-up paddling, diving and surfing): The measures include that any person within the sports premises is required to wear a mask before and after exercise except when having a shower; for a group of more than two persons, it must be arranged in a way to ensure that persons are in sub-groups of no more than two persons and there is at least 1.5 metres between each sub-group, etc.

(7) All the following scheduled premises under Cap. 599F are required to suspend operation:

(a) Amusement game centre;
(b) Bathhouse;
(c) Place of public entertainment (except cinema);
(d) Premises (commonly known as party room) that are maintained or intended to be maintained for hire for holding social gatherings;
(e) Establishment (commonly known as club or nightclub) that is open late into the night, usually for drinking, and dancing or other entertainment;
(f) Karaoke establishment;
(g) Mahjong-tin kau premises; and
(h) Swimming pool.

     Persons responsible for carrying on catering businesses and managers of scheduled premises that contravene the statutory requirements under Cap. 599F would have committed a criminal offence. Offenders are subject to a maximum fine of $50,000 and imprisonment for six months.

Group Gathering
------------------

(8) Unless exempted, the prohibition on group gatherings of more than two persons in public places will continue during the aforementioned seven-day period.

     Any person who participates in a prohibited group gathering; organises a prohibited group gathering; owns, controls or operates the place of such gathering and knowingly allows the taking place of such gathering, commits an offence under Cap. 599G. Offenders are liable to a maximum fine of $25,000 and imprisonment for six months. Persons who participate in a prohibited group gathering may discharge liability for the offence by paying a fixed penalty of $2,000.

Mask-wearing Requirement
------------------------------

(9) The Secretary for Food and Health will specify, by way of a notice published in the Gazette for the purpose of the mandatory mask-wearing requirement under Cap. 599I, a period of seven days from Sept 4 till Sept 10. During the said seven-day period, a person must wear a mask all the time when boarding or on board a public transport carrier, is entering or present in an MTR paid area, or is entering or present in a specified public place (i.e. all public places, save for outdoor public places in country parks and special areas as defined in section 2 of the Country Parks Ordinance (Cap. 208)).

     Under Cap. 599I, if a person does not wear a mask in accordance with the requirement, an authorised person may deny that person from boarding a public transport carrier or entering the area concerned, as well as require that person to wear a mask and disembark from the carrier or leave the said area. A person in contravention of the relevant provision commits an offence and the maximum penalty is a fine at level 2 ($5,000). In addition, authorised public officers may issue fixed penalty notices to persons who do not wear a mask in accordance with the requirement and such persons may discharge liability for the offence by paying a fixed penalty of $2,000.

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