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FDHs warned overstaying, intentional or not, is a crime

Posted on 02 July 2021 No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao

FDHs are told they should apply for an extension at least 8 weeks before their visa expires

Migrant domestic workers who overstay because of oversight are lucky if they get away with nothing more than a reprimand, a source at the Immigration Department said.

The information came after a number of migrant workers admitted to having overstayed unwittingly because they relied on their contract expiry instead of the date stamped on their employment visas.

The workers claimed they were only asked to write a letter explaining why they forgot to renew their visa or apply for extension before it expired.

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At least one worker admitted to having already overstayed for a year before she realized her oversight. Others said they had been without valid visas from one month to six months before they went to Immigration to ask for an extension.

They said they waited for hours for the results of their applications, longer than others who had not overstayed their visa. But that was all the inconvenience they suffered.

But the Immigration source said that not all who overstay out of their own neglect can expect lenient treatment.

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“It’s an offense under Immigration rules to overstay your visa,” he emphasized. Thus, a penalty could be imposed on an offender, depending on how officers assess each case.

He advised workers to always check the visa expiry date and apply for renewal or extension at least eight weeks beforehand.

Cynthia Abdon-Tellez, general manager of the Mission for Migrant Workers, said no one should be complacent on this matter as it is always the officer at the counter who makes decisions, unless he brings it to his immediate superior.

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“An expired visa amounts to overstaying, a crime in the Immigration’s eyes,” said Abdon-Tellez, a long-time community leader in Hong Kong.

“Best to inspect the visa validity date as soon as it is issued and note it in your diary or calendar to have something to remind you in due time,” she said. 

On Monday, two Filipinas who were at Immigration Tower in Wan Chai as early as 8am said they were there to get their visas extended after failing to realize they had overstayed.

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Ellise said she had fixed her attention on the Jul 6 expiry of her second employment contract and not on the validity of her employment visa which was sometime in January.

She said that the Immigration officer who interviewed her asked a lot of questions before telling her to write a letter explaining what happened. He asked her employer to do the same.

Rose, who was with Ellise, said she had a similar story: her visa also expired five months previously without her noticing it, so she was also there waiting for the result of her application for an extension.

"I think they’re punishing us for filing so late,” she said.

Several members of Facebook group Domestic Helpers Corner said they also overstayed accidentally because they didn’t pay attention to their visa expiry date.

One member said the Immigration officer who interviewed her became cranky when he found out she had overstayed for more than a month.

“Did you know that overstaying is illegal!? You can go to jail,” she quoted the officer as saying. But he approved her visa renewal just the same.

Lynn Pejoto said she dropped in her application for visa extension even after she had already overstayed for a month. When an officer saw the lapse, he rang up Pejoto’s employer and told her to make her helper return to Immigration next day with the required documents so the new visa could be stamped immediately on her passport. She had a year left in her contract.

FelDom T. Frogoso said when she renewed her contract last year, she didn’t notice that her visa attached to her old passport had been expired for a year.

“Pero awa ng Diyos wala naman naging problema sa Immigration kasi same employer din naman ako,” she said. (By God’s mercy I had no problem at Immigration because I remained with the same employer.)

She said the officer asked for her salary record but, as she had nothing to show, she was asked to write down the salary she received for the past two years.

Angelica A Cantor asked fellow workers what to expect as her visa had already expired and she was finishing her contract in October.

A visa consultant’s reply may not sound comforting. “Immigration takes visa overstayers very seriously indeed, and long-term overstayers could find themselves jailed for a period before being removed from Hong Kong,” the consultant said.

It’s a fair warning for everyone.

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Local woman found with mutant strain of the coronavirus

Posted on 01 July 2021 No comments

By The SUN

 

The woman with the variant works at Bridal Tea House, a quarantine hotel

The Centre for Health Protection has announced that it is investigating a preliminary positive local case of Covid-19 from an unknown source involving the L452R mutant strain, commonly associated with the Delta variant.

The 41-year-old female patient who lives at Port Centre in Aberdeen works at Bridal Tea House, a designated quarantine hotel in Yau Ma Tei. She last went to work on Thursday, Jul 1.

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She was asymptomatic and her infection was detected during a regular testing for hotel staff members on June 30.

Apart from her regular work at the hotel, she also worked part-time as a cleaner at Bluejay Residences in Ap Lei Chau and House 2, 12A South Bay Road in Repulse Bay, where she last went to work on June 27 and 29 respectively.

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The CHP said her specimen carried the L452R mutant strain but is negative to the N501Y and E484K strains.

She is the second local case of a variant infection. Last week, a 27-year-old male ground crew at Hong Kong Airport was found to carry the Delta variant, but genetic sequencing showed his infection was linked to three women who had just arrived from Indonesia.

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The news came after four new imported cases were reported, bringing Hong Kong’s total Covid-19 tally to 11,927.

The patients, aged between 19 and 54, arrived from the United Kingdom, Russia and Indonesia. All were asymptomatic.


Meanwhile Port Centre was put under overnight lockdown following the cleaning woman’s positive test result, and all residents there were ordered to get tested. They will be subject to further compulsory testing on Days 3, 7, 12 and 19, from the day on which the case is confirmed.

The woman’s workplaces and the places she had visited during the incubation and infectious period will be included in a compulsory testing notice. People who had been present at the relevant venues at specified periods need to undergo compulsory testing on or before the specified date.

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CHP’s investigation showed she has not received Covid-19 vaccination.

Members of the public are encouraged to get vaccinated as soon as possible. Details of the government’s vaccination program can be found at the designated website: www.covidvaccine.gov.hk

 

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Filipina fighting deportation jailed 15 months for illegal work

Posted on No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao 

The Filipina tourist was caught selling fake goods and working illegally

A Filipina tourist who had overstayed her visa since May 2018 and worked illegally selling designer products with fake brands was ordered jailed for 15 months today, Jun 30, in Kowloon City Court after she admitted the offenses.

Jessa Millioneda, 30, and Hong Kong shopowner, Atilla Quiao Ma, 56, faced charges of selling and possessing counterfeit goods. Millomeda was also charged with taking up a job while fighting deportation.

The two both pleaded guilty to the offences before Magistrate Ada Yim.

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On Nov 22 at about 2:30pm last year, Calvin Klein representative Lim Sui-kim and Customs officer Lai Hon-chung conducted an anti-counterfeit operation against a shop named Lead Merchandise Services at Flat A8, 10th floor, Mirador Mansion in Tsim Sha Tsui.

Lim entered the shop pretending to be a customer while Lai stood outside. Lim bought a set of fake assorted cosmetics and a fake Gucci shirt. Then she asked Millomeda who was at the shop, if there was a smaller size of the shirt and other brands such as Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger and Louis Vuitton.

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The Filipina told her all those goods were on the shelves. Lim then bought a counterfeit Coach bag, a Coach wallet, and a Chanel cosmetics set including perfume and lipstick. Her purchases totaled $220, which she paid with a marked $500 bill.

Lim left at 2:48 pm and returned with Lai and another Customs officer five minutes later and arrested Millomeda for selling counterfeit goods.

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Atilla Quiao Ma then arrived and identified herself as owner of the shop. She was arrested by another Customs officer. A name card bearing her name that was found in a bag in the shop confirmed she was the owner. A key to the flat was also found.

The officers, armed with a search warrant, searched the shop and found 169 counterfeit goods, including 48 sunglasses, 45 bags, 28 wallets, 19 watches, 11 pairs of shoes, 11 pieces of clothing, 6 cosmetic sets and 1 perfume, 8 assorted brand cosmetic sets and bags. The fake goods were worth a total of $48,060.


During questioning by the police, Millomeda said she was not an employee of the shop and was just there to visit Ma who was her friend and owner of the shop and goods.

Ma also denied employing Millomeda, saying the Filipina was her friend and was there for a gathering. She said she did not know Millomeda had sold the goods in her shop.

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But during a subsequent questioning on Nov 23, 2020, the two women refused to answer questions related to the case.

Investigators checked Millomeda’s records and discovered that she surrendered on Jan 7, 2019, to Immigration for overstaying. She was released on Feb 27 on recognizance. A removal order was issued against her on Apr 29, 2019 and served to her on May 6 that year. She then filed a non-refoulement claim. 

In mitigation, the defense lawyer said her client, who is single, came to Hong Kong as a tourist in May 2018 and overstayed. He said she was now applying to withdraw the non -refoulement application so she could return home as soon as possiblel

The counsel said his client wanted to help her father, 56, a farmer earning about $1,000 a month, to support her family that included her mother, 54, and three younger siblings.

Ma, for her part, begged forgiveness for her offense, saying she has an 83-year-old mother who depended on her for support.

Yim sentenced Millomeda to two weeks in jail for selling fake goods, four weeks for possession of such goods, and 15 months for working illegally in Hong Kong, with the sentences to be served concurrently.

The magistrate told Ma to return on Jul 15 for the probation officer’s and community service reports. She extended the defendant’s bail until that date.

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Two Covid-19 patients from abroad found with mutated virus

Posted on 30 June 2021 No comments

By The SUN 

The 2 were found to carry the variant on arrival at HK Airport

Two imported cases of Covid-19 infection were recorded today, June 30, and both were found to carry the L452R strain of the Delta variant.

A statement issued by the Centre for Health Protection said the two new imported cases involved an 18-year-old man from the United Kingdom and a 34-year-old woman from Bangladesh. Both were asymptomatic.

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The two arrived separately on Jun 28, with the traveler from the UK flying in aboard flight BA031 while the woman from Bangladesh took flight QR818.

The CHP also said it has been notified of two travelers from Hong Kong who tested positive for Covid-19 two days after arriving in London.

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The two, a 43-year-old woman and a 5-year-old boy, left Hong Kong on Jun 18 aboard flight CX 251. Samples taken from them on Jun 21 tested positive for the coronavirus.

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The CHP said it was following up the cases with UK authority, and epidemiological investigation is ongoing.

Because of the infection, the pair’s place of residence, Horizon Suites in Ma On Shan, will be under a compulsory testing notice. Anyone who had stayed at the building for more than two hours netween Jun 5 to 30, should undergo testing on or before Jul 2.


For the latest news on the Covid-19 infection in Hong Kong, check the dedicated website, www.coronavirus.gov.hk. They may also send a message via WhatsApp to tel no 9617 1823 ior check the link wa.me/85296171823?text=hi.


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Police say employer of Indonesian helper charged with rape, indecent assault

Posted on No comments

 By Daisy CL Mandap 

Putri tells her story via video link (behind the panelists) at the press conference

Police say they have filed one count of rape and three of indecent assault against the male employer of Indonesian domestic worker Putri, who revealed her plight in a news conference organized by the Asian Migrant Coordinating Body on Tuesday, Jun 29.

According to a police spokesperson, the 44-year-old man was charged in Tuen Mun court on May 21 after Putri filed a police complaint two days earlier. As far as they know, the case is ongoing, said the police.

Putri, 29, told her story via a video link during the press conference, with her back toward the camera. She alleged that she was raped twice by her male employer on Feb 11 this year. The day before he allegedly molested her after his wife told Putri to give him a massage.

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The Indonesian worker said she found out that she was pregnant in March 2021 after her female employer took her to a doctor when she became seriously ill.

That was when her “Ma’am” learned about the alleged rape. But instead of getting angry with her husband, the female employer reportedly told Putri to get the baby aborted. She resisted.

Putri, who is married and has a daughter back in Indonesia, was able to get help only after she got sick again on Apr 25 this year, and asked to have a day-off. She used the chance to ask a friend to find help for her.

With the assistance of the Mission for Migrant Workers, Putri was able to leave her employers’ house on May 9, 2021, and report her case to Yuen Long Police.

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She said she did not immediately tell her Madam about the rape because she was ashamed and did not want to be sent back home. “I really wanted to work to give my daughter a better life,” she said during the press briefing.

But after the alleged rape, Putri said she insisted on sleeping on the rooftop, even if she was only given two blankets to lay on, and another blanket to cover her, in the dead of winter.


Putri said it was not just the rape she had to cope with. In the three months that she lived with the couple in their Yuen Long home, she worked for 18 to19 hours on average. She woke up at 5:30 am and slept at 12 midnight.

The house had only one room, so Putri had to sleep on a sofa in the living room. That meant that she could rest only after her employers had finished watching TV. It also left her very vulnerable to abuse.

Sely bravely recounts her ordeal in front of the cameras

Another Indonesian migrant worker, 25-year-old Selly, bravely faced the press to share her own tale of sexual abuse. She said her 55-year-old male employer began kissing and fondling her in January this year, barely a month after she moved into his house which he shared with his wife and two grown up children.

Selly said she often cried during that time as “Madam” often scolded her, and even pulled her shirt and pants and hit her on the head once. “Sir” calmed her down, but over time, began kissing and hugging her, and holding her buttocks.

“All these incidents happened in the bathroom or near the TV downstairs on the ground floor and he always made sure that Madam was upstairs when he sexually assaulted me,” said Selly, reading off a statement written in Bahasa.

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“I was very angry and felt that I was taken advantage of but I was scared and didn’t know what to do. I did not know the Hong Kong regulation and had no friends to help at the time.”

Like Putri, Selly said she was made to work 17 to 18 hours on average daily. She also was not allowed to take a day off in the first three months of her employment, and she was made to sleep in a storage room.

And like Putri and two other foreign domestic workers who shared their tales of woe at the conference, Sely was not given help by her employment agency, which reportedly told her she would be sent back to Indonesia if she wanted to change employers.

Worse, the agency reportedly made her sign an agreement in April, where her male employer reportedly promised not to sexually harass her again, and in turn, she agreed not to tell his wife. She was also asked to delete the video she took of her employer’s predatory acts. She did not.

But two months later, the employer started kissing and hugging her again, until it became a daily occurrence. He even allegedly tried to get inside the bathroom while she was taking a shower, and even tried to force his way into her room at night.

On June 25, she was suddenly allowed to take a day off, so she took the chance to go to the Mission for help. She has not returned to her employers’ house since, and is now preparing to file a complaint with the police.

Herlina faces the press five days after she fled her 'abusive' employer in Tuen Mun

A third Indonesian worker who was at the press con to share her tale of grief was Herlina, whose tales of abuse at the hands of her male employer who lives on Ng Lau Road in Tuen Mun was widely reported earlier.

Herlina, 28, personally recounted how she was forced to call the police early on June 24 after her male employer allegedly beat her up with a fishing rod, causing pock marks on her hands and forehead.

She also spoke of the time in March when she was ordered to throw away three big fish tanks. Since they were heavy, she said she asked her male employer if she could get help from three other Indonesians working in the house, but her boss said no.

Herlina said she got so tired that the third aquarium fell and broke, leaving a big and deep gash on her left foot. But it was only the next day that her female employer took her to the clinic, where her wound was patched up with nine stitches. She still bears the scars from that accident.

Herlina took a picture of her badly wounded foot after it was stitched up in March


Herlina recalled that she was allowed to rest for only one day and even if her foot was still aching, was made to resume her backbreaking work. Most days, she said she managed only five hours of sleep.

Apart from cleaning the male employer’s fishing rods, aquarium and tools, she was also made to take care of the household’s 75 dogs, eight turtles, and several fishes and birds.

Like Putri and Selly, she was not allowed to take a day off, and did not get help from her agency when she tried to reach out to them.

According to the police, the male employer was held for questioning on Jun 29 on a complaint of “common assault,” but was released on police bail. He was told to report back to the Tuen Mun Police by mid-July.

Herlina's hand with punctures from the fish hook

Also arrested but later released on police bail was the 33-year-old female employer of Filipina domestic worker Eden, whose badly bruised body due to repeated assault had shocked her fellow workers who first assisted her.

The employer, said to be a secondary school teacher, was held at Shatin Police station for assault occasioning bodily harm. But the Mission, which is helping Eden with her cases, is pushing for the filing of more serious charges against the employer, a Mrs Mak.

According to Eden, the employer became physically abusive towards her two months after she arrived in Hong Kong to work for Mak, her husband and their two young children in their house in Tsuen Wan.

Whenever she forgot to do something, her employer would pull her hair, hit her or bang her head on the wall. The beating got worse whenever Mak’s seven-month-old baby started crying, said Eden. She said her employer would yell at her, slap or kick her, or scratch her on her face, nose, back or chest.

One abuse that stands out was when Eden said she was forced by Mak to eat leftover congee mixed with dishwashing liquid. That was only because the baby did not finish the congee.

The abuse reportedly escalated on May 25 when Mak dumped a bag of toy blocks on Eden’s head. Then, later that night, when the baby did not finish his food again, the employer slapped Eden 15 times with both hands, before getting a metal spatula, and hitting her on both thighs and her belly.

The employer also threatened to kill her, then took away her mobile phone.

Eden's bruises are shown in a photo taken the day she went to Shatin police

The same thing happened four days later, when Mak reportedly saw that Eden had put the baby’s food away after he showed no sign of wanting to eat. Mak allegedly slapped Eden repeatedly, scratched her face and back, then punched her in the chest a couple of times. She threatened to kill the helper again.

The next day, Eden decided to escape while Mak and her family were out. She went to her employment agency, which advised her to report the abuse to the police but did not inform the Consulate. The next day, Eden sought help from the Mission. The migrant support group is now helping her with her case while the Consulate has given her shelter.

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Delta infection re-classified as linked to imported case

Posted on 29 June 2021 No comments

By The SUN 

It now appears the man was infected by three recently arrived travelers from Indonesia

A 27-year-old man found to carry the Delta variant is no longer classified as a local case with an unknown source.

In a statement issued today, the Centre for Health Protection said that genetic sequencing for case number 11902, a man who worked at HK Airport, showed it was identical to three previous imported cases (11877, 11878 and 11881).

Further, CHP’s investigations revealed that the man had brief encounters at the specimen collection centre at HK Airport with the three linked cases, all involving domestic helpers who just arrived from Indonesia.

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Taking both factors into consideration, the CHP said it was reclassifying the man’s case from local with unknown source, to epidemiologically linked with imported cases.

As a result, case 11918, the man’s female colleague who was also found to carry the Delta variant after she was identified as his close contact, will also be classified as a case linked to an imported case.

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The man’s case sparked concern initially, as it was thought to be the first infection of the Delta variant found within Hong Kong.

With the reclassification, the only local case with the variant with source unknown, is that of the 17-year-old girl in Tin Shui Wai found to carry a rare strain of the Alpha mutation of the virus. Her mother and sister also tested for the variant afterwards.

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Meanwhile, only one case was recorded today, involving a 43-year-old man who flew in from the United Kingdom, and tested positive while in quarantine.

Hong Kong’s total Covid-19 tally is now 11,921.

​A total of 42 cases have been reported in the past 14 days, including 40 imported cases and the two newly reclassified local cases.

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