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Sisters hidden for 3 decades in HK rebuild life in Philippines

Posted on 08 March 2021 No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao 

The sisters saying goodbye to Hong Kong in December last year

For two sisters who had lived in the shadows in Hong Kong for three decades because they had no identity documents or official status, moving to the Philippines and being able to move around freely is more than enough to ease their longing for their birthplace.

Dawn and Kaye, who flew home to the Philippines last Dec 19, are adjusting well to an environment where the people are shy but friendly, and where the village falls silent at 9pm as people go to bed, then wake up at 5am.

“When we were in Hong Kong, we won’t be sleeping until 4am because my friends and I would be playing video games. Here in the Philippines, we’re awake by 5am,” Dawn said in reply to queries The SUN Hong Kong sent her through non-government charity PathFinders Hong Kong.

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Dawn said she and Kaye are overwhelmed by the friendliness of Filipinos but find it difficult adjusting to the slow pace of life where they are now.

“People here are extra-friendly, but services are very slow! Unlike in Hong Kong where everyone is just rushing, here they’re just doing everything at their own pace,” she said.

“I do love the quieter life here in our village, food is way more organic and healthier… We’re adjusting quite well here, it’s so relaxing, the air is so much cleaner,” she said.

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But Dawn said she dislikes how inconvenient moving around is in the Philippines compared with Hong Kong, where shops, buses, the MTR and taxis are not far from one’s doorsteps. For her, jarring  tricycle rides on bumpy roads are a challenge.

Staying with their maternal grandmother and surrounded by relatives, the sisters are learning many things, such as the “many pamahiin” or superstitious beliefs of rural folks that prevent them from going out at night, and doing things their way.

“My mom’s family has been guiding us with everything, teaching us their ways of doing things here. They’re always willing to help out, so we’re very lucky to have them. It took awhile for my cousins to talk to us because they’re way too shy,” Dawn said.

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“It feels great to be spending our time with my grandma, cousins and Mom’s siblings. They were very welcoming when we arrived here, they were also thankful we know how to speak Tagalog, so, they’re not having a hard time communicating with us,” Dawn said.

She said Filipinos they meet in their grandma’s place “can be so shy and timid, but once you get to know each other they will joke ALL the time”. The folks there love to ask the sisters questions about how it is in Hong Kong and how things are going.

Dawn said Filipinos are very welcoming but get intimidated when they find out you grew up in another country. In contrast, Hong Kong people usually ask questions such as “Where are you from? Are you born in Hong Kong?”

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She said once you tell them you were born abroad, they treat you differently, but in a good way.

The sisters when they were too young to understand why they couldn't go to school

Dawn and Kaye got their birth certificates in Hong Kong only last November, shortly before deciding to come of out hiding and fly to the Philippines.

During the 30 years or so that they spent in Hong Kong, the sisters never went to school and stayed most of the time indoors. They mingled only with their Mom’s church friends out of fear they would be found out as undocumented.


When Dawn was born in April 1990, her domestic worker mother Feli reportedly badgered her musician father to get her registered, but he balked each time they were at the Birth Registry.

“He would always tell my mom to just go home because he didn't want to queue up and wait,” said Dawn.

By the time her younger sister was born, their mother, a former domestic helper, had already overstayed her visa in Hong Kong, and so was scared to go and have the birth registered.

Dawn said when she was around eight years old, she figured that there was a problem because they didn’t go to school and never sought medical help when needed. “We would only use over-the-counter medications,” she said.

Some adults who knew about their situation treated them differently, calling them “aliens” or “nobody” when their mom was away or out of earshot.

“Some people are mean, but most of people we were surrounded with are good people,” Dawn said.

Kaye, meanwhile, was not aware of their situation until she was a teenager, when her big sister explained to her why they couldn’t do things their friends did, or stay out late because they had no Hong Kong ID and might get into trouble.

The turning point came in 2015 when a girl aged 15 jumped to her death off the bathroom window of a luxury flat in Repulse Bay because like them, she had no identity.

The girl’s father, insurance executive Nick Cousins and mother Herminia Garcia, a domestic worker who had overstayed her visa for 20 years, did not register her birth, as well as that of her younger sister, for fear of retribution.

Garcia was jailed for 20 months for overstaying while Cousins got eight months in jail, suspended for two years, for failing to register his daughters’ births.


A PathFinders' seminar: The NGO gave the sisters and their mother hope

Dawn said the incident shocked her family, but it also gave her reason to look for help. When she came across an article about how PathFinders has been helping migrant women and their children in Hong Kong, she saved their number and checked out their website.

She told Feli about PathFinders but their mother hesitated due to their previous experience of paying big sums to people who promised to help them, but did not deliver.

The violent anti-government protests in 2019 served as the impetus for them to contact PathFinders, fearing they could be checked by police in the streets any time.

PathFinders helped the sisters and their mother to surrender to Immigration officers in Kowloon Bay on Oct 16, 2019. They were granted bail of $100 each and told to report back every four weeks until they got their birth certificates.

Dawn said she and Kaye were aware they could have stayed and fight for permanent residency in Hong Kong because they were born here.

“People were telling us that we have the right to stay in Hong Kong because we were born there, but we didn’t want to complicate things any more, we just wanted to be free, to do something with our lives,” Dawn said.

“Our mother wanted to go back to her homeland to be with her mother and siblings while my sister and I wanted to start a new chapter elsewhere,” she said.

She said Kaye has already registered for Alternative Learning System, or ALS, a parallel learning system that provides a practical option for those who do not have or can’t access formal education in Philippines schools.

“She’s going to start from there and see what she can do, she wants to pursue her photography,” Dawn said.

“We miss Hong Kong dearly! Every single day since we got here, I’d always remember something about Hong Kong. I miss the food there so much, my friends, the convenience. I just miss everything about Hong Kong except the pollution,” Dawn said.

The sisters didn’t ask Hong Kong Immigration whether they can come back for a visit or for work in the future, Dawn said.

“But I do hope that if nothing works out for my sister here, she can go back there. If not, Hong Kong is not the only place on earth where she can start a career. But I’m sure we can go back to Hong Kong for a visit one day,” she said.

As for herself, Dawn has other plans, and they do not concern Hong Kong. “I am working on my paperto fly to my fiancè in USA,” she said.

The sisters, indeed, are finally home.

Sickly elderly man and woman in ICU after getting Covid-19 jabs

Posted on 07 March 2021 No comments

By The SUN 

The 80-year-old male patient is in critical condition at Caritas Medical Centre

An 80-year-old man and a 72-year-old woman both with a history of diabetes and other conditions were admitted overnight to the intensive care unit of two public hospitals with suspected serious adverse reaction to coronavirus vaccination. 

The Hospital Authority said the man, who also had blockage of the carotid artery,  hypertension and stroke, was vaccinated on Mar 1 and suffered from chest pain yesterday, Mar 6. 

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He was taken to the accident & emergency department of Caritas Medical Centre but did not respond well to treatment, so he was transferred to the ICU on the same night. The provisional diagnosis was acute coronary syndrome and he is now in critical condition. 

According to the information, he received the Sinovac vaccine at Tin Fai Road Sports Centre Community Vaccination Centre, Yuen Long.

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The woman, on the other hand, took the Sinovac jab at the Tseung Kwan O Sports Centre yesterday. She felt malaise after vaccination, so she skipped two doses of regular insulin.

She was later admitted to Prince of Wales Hospital after she was found to have severe complications from diabetes, then transferred to intensive care after her condition deteriorated.

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Apart from diabetes, the woman reportedly has a history of hypertension, hypothyroidism and hyperlipidemia, or excessive fat deposits in the arteries. 

The 72-year-old woman was taken to Prince of Wales Hospital with severe diabetes


The HA said it was also trying to find out more information about two other people who were taken to hospital after taking the Sinovac jabs at the Kwun Chung Sports Centre this morning.

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A 66-year-old woman reportedly complained of chest pain and feeling nauseous minutes after getting the vaccine.

Another woman, said to be 45 years old, felt unwell and developed allergic reactions such as rashes after getting home following the inoculation.

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A chief manager of the HA, Lau Ka-hin, said the woman is in stable condition in Queen Elizabeth Hospital but had no other information

Meanwhile, 16 new Covid-19 cases were recorded Sunday, three of them imported. Two of these patients came from the United States, and the other, from Canada.

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Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan from the Centre for Health Protection said the two American women aged 67 and 43 tested positive upon arrival on a Cathay Pacific flight in Hong Kong on Friday.

The Canadian woman, 64, arrived on Feb 15 aboard a Cathay flight and developed symptoms on Friday during quarantine at Ramada Hong Kong Grand View in North Point. She was found to be carrying the highly infectious variant of the disease.


Chuang said there are now 57 imported cases carrying the N501Y strain, 34 with the British, 7 with the South African and 4 with the Brazilian variant. The remaining 12 are uncategorized.

The CHP said five of the 13 local cases had untraceable infection sources. Today’s new cases took the tally of Covid-19 patients in Hong Kong to 11,091.

One of the five patients with unknown sources was a 51-year-old man who works at Shatin Shek Mun. His office mates will be sent to the quarantine center.

Another was a male computer programmer aged 32 in an office in Carnarvon Road, Tsimshatsui. He lives at 258 Tai Nam St in Shamshuipo. He watched a movie on the fourth floor of  K11 Musea and also used a toilet there.

More than 10 staff of the same office will have to undergo virus testing, Chuang said.

Chuang said 5 of the 13 local cases had unknown sources

Others with no known sources include a retiree, a property agency staff in North Point, and a worker at a construction site for the third airport runway project.

Chuang said more than 30 colleagues of the construction worker were sent for testing, and several hundred other workers at the site will also be tested.

A third case is a retired man, 73, who visited several restaurants in Kowloon and lives in Regency Park.

There are fewer than 10 preliminary positive cases today, five of them untraceable.

One is a restaurant worker at Star House. Chuang said if the restaurant has a few staff, they will be quarantined. If the staff is big, everyone will be put under mandatory testing.

HA’s Lau said a total of 213 confirmed patients are being treated in 22 public hospitals, the AsiaWorld treatment facility and the North Lantau Hospital.

He said 13 of these patients are in critical condition, 14 are in serious condition and the remaining 186 patients are in stable condition.

A total of 226 cases have been recorded in the past 14 days from Feb 21 to Mar 6, including 187 local cases of which 61 are from unknown sources.

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Retired British doctor accused of indecent assault on FDH during massage, whipping sessions

Posted on No comments

 By Daisy CL Mandap 

The hearing at Eastern Court has been extended for two more days

Sordid tales of sexual assaults allegedly committed by a retired British surgeon on his former foreign domestic helper during a “body check-up”, massage and whipping sessions, were heard in Eastern Court on Mar 4 and 5.

The allegations against Dr. Brian Drew Apthorp, 83, came from his alleged victim, a Filipina domestic worker in her ‘30s, who worked for him between September 2018 and August 2019.

The helper, referred to only as "Miss X", gave evidence during the first two days of the trial of Apthorp on two indecent assault charges before Magistrate Daniel Tang. 

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The trial, which was originally set to last for two days, will continue for two more days, on Apr 21 and 22.

To bolster its case, the prosecution presented four video clips secretly taken by the helper showing her massaging a fully naked Apthorp. In one of the videos, a hand which Miss X identified was hers, was pulled and made to hold the man’s exposed genitals.

Several devices said to have been used during the “Whipping Thursday” sessions were also presented in court. The prosecution said the tools were seized from the doctor’s house on Shouson Hill Road in Wong Chuk Hang during his arrest.

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Apthorp, who denied the charges, chose to defend himself. During his cross-examination of his accuser, the still sprightly defendant tried to portray himself as the victim, saying it was the helper who forced him to submit to the whipping sessions.

“I was so depressed I could not complain,” he said, adding it was Miss X who chose the tools that were used during the whippings.

He did not deny making the helper submit to a body check and pap smear, but insisted he explained to her that the procedure was meant to protect her from HPV (human papillomavirus), an infection that commonly affects the genitals.

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He ended his questioning by accusing the helper of stealing an electric fan worth $800, creating trouble in his house, and extorting money from him. He cited as proof a personal injury claim for $169,000 that she filed against him at the Equal Opportunities Commission.

Stung by the accusation, the Filipina asked the magistrate to allow her to speak at the end of her testimony. She then tearfully lashed out at her alleged tormentor.

Hindi ko ginagawa ito para sa sarili ko kundi para sa lahat ng mga foreign domestic helper na nagtrabaho sa kanya at inabuso niya,” Miss X said.

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(I am doing this not for myself but for all the foreign domestic helpers who had worked for him and were abused by him).

She also said her experience had left her so distraught that she needed counseling and was unemployed for more than a year.

The alleged offenses happened in a house on ritzy Shouson Hill (file)

During questioning by the prosecutor, the helper gave details of how her elderly employer had allegedly touched her breasts, then stuck his fingers in her genitals while pretending to do a body check on her the day after he signed her contract in September 2018.

When the magistrate asked her how she knew the accused had inserted fingers into her and not a medical tool, the helper said she was a mother, and knew how it was like to undergo a medical check-up.

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She said the experience left her scared but Janice, a fellow Filipina helper who was then working for Apthorp, told her not to worry as “it was just a regular pap smear.”

Then in November of that year, after she had moved into Aprthorp’s house, she started doing daily body massage on the elderly man, who is said to have a pacemaker implanted in his chest.

During one of these sessions, which always started at 9am, the employer told her to pinch his nipples. She said she complied, then left when he saw him masturbating.

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The next time, she said he directly asked her to help him masturbate, so she tried to run away.

Pero nang akma na akong aalis, hinila niya ang aking kamay at nilagay niya sa kanyang ari. Hindi ko mahawakan kasi ako ay nandidiri. Pero hindi ko din mahila kasi tataob ako sa kanya,” she said.

(But as I tried to leave, he pulled my hand and put it on his genitals. I didn’t want to touch it as I felt disgusted. But I also couldn’t pull it way because I would land on top of him).


Afterwards, she said she got scared because Apthorp would shout at her whenever she resisted. He alternated this with pleas of “help me empty my balls” each time she tried to struggle.

In December, she said the employer decided to punish her for resisting his orders. He allegedly told her to cut and pull off all the bamboo trees in his garden, then haul them up several flights of stairs to dump them by the roadside.

Later, when he saw her taking a lunch break, he allegedly told her to stop and to pull down several heavy folders from her room, as further punishment.

She said the physical ordeal left her feeling scared of being "punished" again that she began submitting to his demands.

That same month, the employer initiated the weekly Whipping Thursday session, during which she was told to use numbered tools to whip him around the buttocks as he stood in front of a mirror. The whipping would then be followed by the sleazy massage routine.

The helper said she was made to massage him daily, except on days when Apthorp’s girlfriend was around. 

The alleged sexual assaults lasted until early April, 2019, when Apthorp left for his annual vacation in Europe.

Miss X is being helped by Help and Legal Aid in pursuing her cases

Miss X, who said she had been so traumatized and shamed by her experiences, took the chance to seek help. She consulted non-government organization Help for Domestic Workers, and sent them her videos.

On Jul 29, 2019 she emailed a notice of termination to Apthorp, who was then still on vacation. In turn, the employer decided to fire her the next month.

With Help’s assistance, the helper filed a complaint with the police, then applied for legal aid to pursue a personal injuries claim against Apthorp. The court was told that she is also being helped by RainLily, a shelter for abused women.

Two prosecution witnesses are set to be called to give testimony when the hearing resumes. Then Apthorp, who is on police bail, can give evidence in his defense if he so chooses.

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Covid-19 cases down to 8, including 2 FDHs

Posted on 06 March 2021 No comments

 By The SUN 

Covid-19 testing area at HK Airport

Hong Kong health authorities reported eight new Covid-19 cases today, Mar. 6, bringing the city’s tally to 11,075.

Half of the cases were imported, and included two foreign domestic helpers. One is a 41-year-old woman who arrived from the Philippines and tested positive at the airport although asymptomatic.

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The other one is 46-year-old Indonesian helper who developed symptoms on Mar 4 and was found infected on arrival at Hong Kong airport yesterday.

2 new cases - 1 confirmed, the other preliminary - are linked to K11 Musea

The two others are returnees who were both found to have the coronavirus variant. One is a one-year-old baby girl who arrived from Pakistan via United Arab Emirates, and the other is a 56-year-old woman from India. Both had no symptoms.

Of the four local cases, two were of unknown sources.

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One is a 34-year-old computer technician who used a ground floor washroom at K11 Musea mall in Tsim Sha Tsui, site of a recent cluster of infections. 

The patient also visited at least two restaurants in Wanchai and attended a property investment seminar where there were around 50 participants. 

He lives on Heard Street in Wanchai and works in Lincold House in Taikoo Place.

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The other is a 75-year-old man retired man who lives in Fu Ning Garden in Tseung Kwan O and developed symptoms on Mar 3. Before testing positive he visited several restaurants in TKO and on Wanchai Road.

The two linked cases are both children of a previously confirmed patient. Their schools, St Paul’s Co-Educational College and St Paul’s College, have been asked to suspend classes for two weeks.

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More than 10 preliminary positive cases were also detected, including a 56-year-old doctor who has clinics in Tuen Mun and Kwai Fong and lives in Tai Kok Tsui. He visited two hostels for the elderly during the incubation period.

Another case is a 32-year-old computer programmer at a company in Tsim Sha Tsui. He watched a movie on the fourth floor of  K11 Musea and also used a toilet there.


A third case is a 73-year-old retired man who visited several restaurants in Kowloon and lives in Regency Park. Another is a construction worker at the Chek Lap Kok airport. More than 30 of his colleagues were deemed as close contacts and moved to quarantine.

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55-year-old woman dies of stroke 3 days after getting Sinovac jab

Posted on No comments

By The SUN 

The woman died at Kwong Wah Hospital early this morning

The Hong Kong Health Department has reported the death from an “acute stroke” of a 55-year-old woman, days after receiving the Sinovac coronavirus jab.

In a statement issued today,  the DH said the woman had a history of chronic illnesses. She suffered a stroke yesterday, Mar 5, and was admitted to Caritas Medical Centre.

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She was later transferred to Kwong Wah Hospital where she had a cardiac arrest and passed away early this morning.

The woman received her Covid jab at the Kwun Chung Sports Centre on Tuesday.

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A co-convenor of the expert panel looking at possible side-effects from Covid vaccination, Ivan Hung, has said the deceased had high blood pressure as well as high cholesterol.

He said the mass vaccination which kicked off two weeks ago should continue since they don’t know if the woman’s death was related to her having received the Sinovac jab.

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He revealed 17 of around 61,500 people who had the Sinovac jab in the first week had experienced serious side effects, but most have recovered and people have no cause to worry.

Hung said the experts panel will discuss the case on Monday.

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Earlier, the panel ruled out a connection between the death of a 63-year-old man from an apparent heart attack and his having been vaccinated with Sinovac earlier.

The man, who had diabetes and high blood pressure, was reportedly found with clogged arteries after he died, but the panel is still looking into the exact cause of death.

Dr Chan admits fewer people are booking for a jab after the man's reported death 

Separately, Health Secretary Dr Sophia Chan admitted in a press interview that the number of people applying to get the vaccine has dropped “a little bit” after the man’s death.

“There’s still bookings everyday, but it has slowed down a little bit and we understand the situation,” Chan said. “The public wants to understand the situation a little bit more.”

Government figures show that the number of those who booked online for a jab dropped from a peak of 18,000 on Tuesday to around 6,000 Friday. 

Chan urged anyone with health issues and are unsure about vaccination to consult their doctor.

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