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Two FDHs linked to earlier infections among 8 new Covid-19 cases

Posted on 22 September 2020 No comments

By Daisy CL Mandap


CE Lam reports a significant drop in the number of new infections

Two foreign domestic helpers whose nationalities were not disclosed, were among eight new local cases of Covid-19 reported today, Sept 22.

The news came as Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced a drop in the number of local cases in the past week, particularly those with unknown source.

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In a press briefing, the top official said that of the 67 confirmed cases within the period, 44 – or 2/3 - were imported, and of the 22 local cases, only 7 had untraceable sources, or “an average of one per day.”

“It shows that in the third wave, the situation is stabilizing,” Lam said. “However, given the fact that there are still cases with unknown source, that means there is still a hidden transmission chain in the community. Members of the public should not let their guards down, we cannot afford to do so.”

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CE Lam announced that the new gathering restrictions that took effect last week will be extended for another week.

These include limiting public gatherings to no more than four to a group, extending the dining hours in restaurants until midnight, and reopening theme parks, clubs, karaoke bars, swimming pools, gyms and other sports facilities.

It's still 4 to a group for at least another week, says the CE

Health authorities did not hold their usual press conference today, so members of their press team could only give basic information about the new cases.

Both helpers in the list appear to have been infected at their workplace, or their employers’ respective houses, as they’re described as linked to earlier infections. They were both asymptomatic.

The first, identified as Case No 5041, is 30 years old and lives with her employers at Block 1 Venice Gardens in Tuen Mun.

The other, Case No 5043, is 23 years old and is a resident of Block A, Fok Lin Building in Hung Hom.

The third other local case is a 14-year-old girl who developed symptoms on Sept 20, and is also linked to previous infections. She lives in Lok Man House in Lok Fu Estate in Wong Tai Sin where three cases were previously reported, the last one being a 69-year-old woman was found infected on Sept 17.

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Five were imported cases, all returnees from India. They arrived just before flights to India were suspended for two weeks because of a surge in the number of their passengers testing positive on arrival in Hong Kong.

The A 39-year-old man flew in aboard an Emirates flight on Sunday, Sept 20, while the four others who appear to belong to the same family, tested positive while under quarantine at Ramada Hotel in North Point.

The four patients, all females aged 5, 9, 36 and 40, all arrived on Sept 11 via Air India Flight AI310.

The new cases brought the city’s tall to 5,046 with 103 related deaths.

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Filipino tourist wins right to appeal conviction in US$500b fake instruments case

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 By The SUN

Appeal judge found the Filipino's lawyer failed to follow his client's instructrions

A High Court judge has allowed a Filipino businessman to appeal his conviction for passing off US$500 billion worth of forged documents as genuine to a bank executive two years ago.

But David G. Morano, Jr., who was ordered jailed for three years after his conviction on Oct 2 last year, failed to get leave to appeal his sentence.

In his judgment handed down on Sept 16, Court of Appeal Justice Ian McWalters ruled that Morano’s counsel in his District Court trial had failed to follow his client’s instructions in questioning a witness.

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In his application for leave to appeal, Morano said barrister John Hemmings who was defending him, did not carry out his instruction to tell the trial judge during his cross-examination of prosecution witness Miss So that she was not the bank staff he talked to.

Morano said Hemmings stopped him because So was then inconsistent in her statement and the lawyer was apparently waiting for the witness to make more inconsistencies.

Justice McWalters said in his reasons for judgment he saw it “reasonably arguable” that the only proper course for a barrister was to ask the judge for time to talk with his client about his instructions. If the client insists, the barrister must put them across, he said. 

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“Of course, I must emphasize that merely crossing the threshold of reasonable arguability does not mean that the ground will succeed and that even if the Court of Appeal was persuaded of its merit, it does not mean that the conviction must be quashed,” he said.

Morano, who looks middle-aged, was found guilty on a charge of using a false instrument after a six-day trial before District Court Judge David Dufton on Oct 2 last year.

Dufton ruled that Morano knew the documents he handed to the HSBC staff, Miss So, were false and had the intention to induce her to accept them as genuine and do some act to her own or any other’s prejudice. 

 

The incident happened on Oct 29, 2018 when Morano presented the fake documents to the staff in HSBC’s head office in Central.

He also produced a color print of a gold plate and 10 other documents purportedly issued by the Philippine and United States governments and the United Nations to show that he was doing charity work.     

He asked the staff for a certification that he had an account in the bank with US$500 billion in savings to back up his request for funding from supporters of a construction project for charity, the prosecution said.

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After the staff failed to find in the bank’s database the account number that Morano provided, police were called and he was arrested.

The three persons who were with him, Malaysian and Taiwanese males surnamed Tang and Li, and a Chinese female surnamed He, disappeared when the police arrived.

In upholding Morano’s sentence, Judge McWalters pointed out that the defendant was convicted after trial, came to Hong Kong for a dishonest purpose, and could have caused substantial damage if he succeeded.

“For these reasons I granted the applicant leave to appeal against his conviction and refused him leave to appeal against his sentence,” McWalters said, adding that Morano had the right to re-file his case.

However, the judge said that if Court of Appeal finds no merit in his application, it could order that part of the time he has spent in custody pending his appeal would not be counted as part of the term of his sentence.

He remanded Morano in custody after issuing him an appeal aid certificate so he could have legal representation when he goes back to court to challenge his conviction.

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Appeal court upholds live-in policy ruling for FDHs

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By Daisy CL Mandap

Bed in kitchen: This is what live-out advocates want stopped

The Court of Appeal has rejected an application to overturn the lower court’s decision upholding the legality of the Hong Kong government’s live-in policy for foreign domestic helpers.

Filipina DH Nancy A. Lubiano filed the appeal against Court of First Instance Judge Anderson Chow’s decision in February 2018 dismissing her application for a judicial review of the policy which she said was unlawful and discriminatory. 

For the appeal, her counsel narrowed down the argument to claiming that forcing FDHs to live with their employers violated their right to a rest day and limited work hours as provided under art 7 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

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But in its decision handed down Monday, Sept 20, the appeal court said that FDHs cannot claim such rights as they do not even have the right to enter and remain in Hong Kong.

Further, the court agreed with Judge Chow that the risk of abuse is not heightened by the worker having to live with her employer. Their close proximity while inside the house could expose the worker to ill-treatment while at work, regardless of whether he/she also lives in the employer’s residence. 

The decision was concurred in by Vice President Johnson Lam and Justices Aarif Barma and Au Hing-cheung.

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Solicitors for the appellant, Daly & Associates called the judgment disappointing saying it was a “judicial stamp determining that foreign domestic workers are not worthy of the basic rights afforded to others who live and work in Hong Kong lawfully.”

The statement further said that the live-in policy was symptomatic of the “wider systemic discrimination faced by FDWs in Hong Kong”. Given that laws meant to protect them are hardly enforced, it was up to the courts to set this right.

The government, however, applauded the decision, saying the decision underlined the long-established government policy that locals should be given priority in employment and foreign workers should only be allowed in if there are manpower shortages.

The statement said that before coming to Hong Kong, FDHs sign an agreement saying they can only live with their employers.

“In other words, FDHs are fully aware of the "live-in requirement" before signing the contract and they are admitted to Hong Kong on such basis,” said the statement.

It further said that FDHs whose rights are violated could always turn to the Labour and Immigration Departments for help and redress.


Government has always said that while the policy had been part of the FDW importation scheme from the early 1980s, it was only included in their standard employment contract in April 2003. Before this, FDWs and their employers could agree on whether they wanted a live-in arrangement or not.

Since its implementation, migrant support organizations have been trying to get the policy withdrawn, alleging it has left FDWs vulnerable to abuse. But it took Lubiano’s landmark challenge to get the issue heard in court.

During the appeal hearing on Mar 17 and 18, Lubiano’s counsel Paul Hsieh, SC, said FDHs should be allowed to live outside of their employers’ house to ensure they get a full rest on their only day off each week.

 

Hsieh says infringing on a right “does not only refer to the actual taking away, but also to any act that heightens the risk of that right being taken away.”

He cited two studies made by NGOs Justice Center and the Mission for Migrant Workers that showed most FDWs are made to work, before and after taking their day off. 

In another survey conducted by three migrant support groups and published on Mar 16, it was shown that the coronavirus outbreak had led to new kinds of contract violations by employers. About 40% (160,000) of those surveyed said they had not been out of their employer’s home for at least a month, with only half saying this was with their consent.



Many OFWs camp out on their days off to get some breathing space

But Hsieh was quick to point out that he was not advocating that all FDWs be allowed to live out as that would be unrealistic, but to return to the previous practice of making a live-in arrangement optional.

Benjamin Yu, SC, who appeared for the respondent Director of Immigration, said there was no need to refer to international laws when it came to protecting FDH rights.

The Employment Ordinance already clearly states that every FDH is entitled to a rest day per week, and there are channels for redress already set up if this is not followed.

In his ruling, Judge Chow was more forthright, saying the live-in arrangement was something that the FDWs could accept or not even before they come to Hong Kong.

“If, prior to coming to Hong Kong, he/she considers the Live-In Requirement to amount to an unacceptable invasion of his/her personal or private rights, he/she can of course choose to remain in his/her home country, or work in some other countries which do not have such requirement,” said Chow in his judgment.

Then, after coming to Hong Kong, the FDW finds the policy unacceptable, he or she can still terminate the employment contract by giving a month’s notice, said the judge.

Earlier stories here: 

https://www.sunwebhk.com/2020/03/live-in-policy-put-migrant-workers.html

https://www.sunwebhk.com/2018/03/ngo-blasts-court-for-rejecting_9.html

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4 out of 6 new Covid-19 cases are Filipina DHs

Posted on 21 September 2020 No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao

The elderly helper's case is untraceable (file photo)

Four Filipina domestic helpers - three of them new arrivals, and the fourth, a 60-year-old who works for a local family - were among six new coronavirus cases confirmed today, Sept 21, by Hong Kong health officials.

The two other cases were a 38-year-old male returnee from Togo, Benin; and a 45-year-old local man in Tuen Mun who was linked to a previous infection.

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Today’s new cases brought to 5,039 the total number of Covid-19 infections since late January this year.

Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection said the elderly helper lives with her employers’ family in Ching Hoi House, Ting Ching Estate in Tin Shui Wai.


During an inquiry, the maid said that during weekends, she stayed in a room in Ma Tin Pok, Yuen Long, and shared a bathroom with other people. But police couldn’t find the address.

Chuang said the police distributed photos of the maid just in case somebody knows her.

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The woman also disclosed that she went to a Tin Hau Bazaar hair salon on Sept 16 before going to the Chung Fu public market. The hairdresser will be sent for testing and quarantine.

Chuang said in the past few days, there were two confirmed cases who had been to Chung Fu market. She said on the safe side, specimen bottles would be given to stall owners and vendors there.

A 10th FDH who flew in aboard a HK Air flight on Sept 9 tests positive 


Also included in today’s new cases is another helper who flew in aboard Hong Kong Airlines Flight HH782 on Sept 9, the 10th person from that flight to test positive for Covid-19.

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The 31-year-old woman was among 13 Filipina DHs who stayed in an employment agency hostel hostel in Manila before they traveled together to Hong Kong

The third Filipina, a 55-year-old, also tested positive on her second test. She flew into Hong Kong on Sept 10 via Cathay flight CX906.

The fourth, who is 42, arrived on Sept 19 on flight CX 966, and was taken directly to hospital after testing positive at the airport.

Dr Lau Ka-hin, chief manager of the Hospital Authority, said that as of 9am today, five more confirmed patients were discharged from hospital, bringing the total number of recoveries to 4,717.

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No patient passed away in the past 24 hours, so the death toll remains at 102.

A total of 185 confirmed patients are in 17 public hospitals; 13 of them are critical, 10 are serious, and the remaining 162 are in stable condition.

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HK Immigration says Filipina DH 'removed' because employer backed out

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By Vir B. Lumicao

The hotel in Ortigas where Deno spent the first few days of her quarantine

A Filipina domestic helper was sent back to the Philippines last Saturday after her prospective employer cancelled her work contract on learning she tested positive for Covid-19 on arrival, the Hong Kong Immigration Department said today, Sept 21.

This was the reason why Ermelyn Deno, 31, was issued with a removal order as soon as she was discharged from Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital on Sept 19, after a week of treatment.

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An Immigration spokeswoman clarified that Deno’s case did not indicate a policy shift in treating incoming migrant workers who test positive for coronavirus at the airport.

In this case, Immigration reportedly asked the employer after Deno was treated at Eastern Hospital if she still wanted to employ the worker and the employer said she had changed her mind, the spokeswoman said.

 

In a separate statement, an Immigration spokesman said in response to an emailed query that Deno was not deported, but was “removed” from Hong Kong because she had no right to remain here.

“The reason for her removal was that her employer decided not to continue with her contract,” the spokesman said.


The spokeswoman said a foreigner is deported if he or she has been convicted of a crime in Hong Kong. On the other hand, she said removal is the process of sending away someone who has no right to remain in Hong Kong.

Both spokespersons asserted the Filipina was not covered by the 14-day extension of stay given to terminated foreign helpers as a matter of policy.


The spokeswoman said the grace period is given to FDHs to pack their belongings before they go home, and not to look for new employers.

She added that terminated workers must return to their home countries and, from there, apply for new employers and return to Hong Kong once they are issued new work visas.

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The spokesman said Deno was not given an entry visa to Hong Kong but was only taken to the hospital for treatment because she tested positive for Covid-19 upon her arrival.


Deno's visa was not stamped as 'completed' as if she never entered Hong Kong

 Whatever the action against Deno is called, it has surprised many, including those in the employment agency sector.

 Thomas Chan, chair of the Hong Kong Union of Employment Agencies said it was “strange” to hear about the case.

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“This is a case deserving the attention of Polo (Philippine Overseas Labor Office) and the employment sectors,” Chan said. “(It’s) really a new approach.

Meanwhile, Deno, who spent two days quarantined in Pasig City, said she was released today after receiving a negative swab test result this morning from the Red Cross.

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She said she would stay for a few days in Metro Manila to visit the agency that deployed her to Hong Kong and coordinate with the local government unit in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan, regarding safety protocols for her return home.

Despite testing negative in three tests prior to her discharge in Hong Kong, she still has to complete the 14-day quarantine required of all new arrivals in the Philippines.

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