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Probation for 2 students who admitted shoplifting

Posted on 28 August 2024 No comments

 

Shop where theft happened (Google Maps photo)

The two Filipina students who pleaded guilty last Aug. 14 to shoplifting clothes at an H&M store in Causeway Bay, were placed on probation today for 12 months.

P. Basiuang, 20 years old, and L.J. Centeno, aged 18, were also asked to each pay $500 in court costs, taken from their bail money.

Eastern Court Principal Magistrate Don So told them to “listen to your probation officer.”

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If not, he warned, “I will send you to jail.”

Before closing the case, he told them to go straight to the probation office on the 12th floor of the Eastern Court building to begin their process of rehabilitation through counselling and supervision.

The two had earlier admitted that they stole two black T-shirts, one black vest, one grey T-shirt, one pair of white socks, one pair of black pants and one pair of beige socks at the H&M store at the Fashion Walk on Paterson St. in Causeway Bay last April 15.

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Consulate warns OFWs against illegal recruitment to Poland, Hungary

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First page of the PCG advisory

The Philippine Consulate General in Hong Kong has again warned overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) against moving to a third country, specifically Poland and Hungary, as this violates the Philippines’ labor laws.

In an advisory posted on Facebook yesterday, the Consulate warned OFWs against an “illegal recruitment scheme that offers employment in Central Europe, particularly in Hungary and Poland.”

The people behind the alleged illegal recruitment are said to charge exorbitant fees and withhold the applicant’s passport to compel them to pursue their job applications to the two European countries.

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The Consulate reminded the public of Philippine regulations that forbid third-country deployment, meaning all overseas recruitment of Filipinos must be done by licensed recruitment agencies, to ensure they will be deployed only to countries where their rights are protected.

Despite such law, however, many OFWs still manage to move to other countries which offer better pay and the opportunity to gain residency, unlike in places like Hong Kong where they are not allowed permanent residency, no matter how long they have worked.

With a surge in demand for care workers in many countries in Europe and other places like Japan because of their ageing population, many OFWs in Asia are setting their sights further afield.

Lately, a number of OFWs in Hong Kong have managed to move to European countries which until recently was off-limits to them because of language, qualification and other constraints, such as the Netherlands, Finland, Norway and even the United Kingdom.

Despite these, warnings abound about the pitfalls of taking this plunge, largely because of the proliferation of unscrupulous agencies that send them on to a strange place without ensuring that their rights and welfare are protected.

PCG warns, 3rd country deployment is illegal

A recent series of articles published by Al Jazeera exposed the myriad of problems faced by Filipinos who went to Poland for work without the benefit of an employment contract duly processed in the Philippines.

In an interview conducted with 22 Filipinas there, nearly all claimed to have suffered exploitation in the form of wage theft, unreasonable salary deductions, unlawful termination and passport confiscation, apart from being forced to sign documents in a language they did not understand.

They reported being paid only a tiny fraction of the salary promised them, even after paying recruitment fees as high as US$5,000 or around HK$40,000.

(see the story here: https://www.sunwebhk.com/2024/04/after-leaving-grind-in-asia-filipino.html).

The Migrant Workers Office in Hong Kong advises those who want to ensure that they are placed legally in a foreign country to check on this website that lists the agencies that have approved job offers in countries abroad: https://dmw.gov.ph/approved-job-orders.

The link below lists all the recruitment agencies licensed to deploy Filipinos for work abroad: https://dmw.gov.ph/licensed-recruitment-agencies

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Serial offender jailed 1 month for stealing chocolates

Posted on 27 August 2024 No comments

 

Store where chocolates were stolen (Photo from Google Maps)

A Filipino who has had 12 convictions, eight of them involving dishonesty, was sentenced to a month in jail today after he pleaded guilty at Eastern Court to stealing $524 worth of chocolates at a 7-Eleven store.

Roel Galanza, 41 years old, failed to appear at his last hearing and was ordered arrested by Principal Magistrate Don So, and his bail of $500 confiscated.

So also ordered the defendant to pay compensation to DFI Retail Group Holdings, which owns the North Point store where he stole the four boxes of chocolate on Dec. 19 last year.

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His duty lawyer said, however, that Galanza was unable to add to the bail that he had put up, to fully pay for what he stole.

In response, So set the compensation at $500, to be offset from the bail.

The defense lawyer said Galanza was forced to commit the offense because he was jobless and had no money.

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DH jailed 6 months for stealing $88K worth of jewelry

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Where theft took place (Photo from Google Maps)

A domestic helper was jailed for six months today after she admitted stealing $88,000 worth of jewelry from her employer.

Janice Abel, 33 years old, was charged before the Eastern Court after police found pawnshop receipts in her belongings, showing that she raised $12,000 from pawning the jewelry believed to have been stolen between March 19 and May 23 this year from her employer’s Quarry Bay flat.

The jewelry consisted of five necklaces, two bracelets and two rings.

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The employer has since recovered the jewelry after paying the $12,000 to the pawnshops, and wanted to recover the amount from Abel.

Abel’s duty lawyer, however, said she was jobless and unable to pay the compensation.

In mitigation, the lawyer said she was forced to steal to pay off debts she incurred in coming to work in Hong Kong.

Magistrate Don So asked the lawyer what the penalty was for the offense.

After the lawyer answered that the maximum was two years imprisonment, So handed down a six-month sentence.

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JoyYou joy for seniors using Octopus over next 2 weeks

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Seniors will get 8% off purchases at participating merchants

From tomorrow, Aug 28, until Sept. 10, seniors holding JoyYou cards will receive a $8 cash rebate for every $100 they spend at participating merchants, for a total of no more than $800 per user.

The “828 JoyYou Fest” celebrates the full transition to the use of the JoyYou cards by those aged 60 and above as of last Sunday.

The MTR Corporation said a total budget of of $8.28 million has been set aside for the promotion.

Cardholders can collect their rebate by tapping their cards via the Octopus mobile app or at Octopus Service Points starting this Saturday.

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Over 60 participating merchants -- including popular names like Café de Coral and PARKnSHOP -- will also offer flash bargains geared towards the elderly at more than 3,500 selected outlets.

The MTR Corporations said the campaign is in recognition of the elderly’s contribution of $2 billion in retail consumption each month, and is aimed at boosting consumer spending.

By the last quarter of the year, Octopus plans to launch a virtual JoyYou card that can be used on smartphones and smartwatches, to further boost spending among seniors.

The promo could be held annually, depending on the results of the initial event.

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Two FDHs arrested in latest anti-illegal worker operation

Posted on 26 August 2024 No comments

 

The FDHs were arrested in footbridge over Mong Kok area (Photo from Google Maps)

Two more foreign domestic helpers selling food on a pedestrian footbridge were arrested in a joint operation by the Immigration Department (ImmD) and Food and Environmental Hygiene Department in Mong Kok on Sunday (Aug. 25)

The two women, aged 21 and 35, are expected to face breach of condition of stay charges in court.

Their arrest came just two weeks after two other unnamed FDHs were arrested at the same spot for the same reason.

An ImmD spokesman said, "A foreign domestic helper should only perform domestic duties for the employer specified in the Standard Employment Contract. The helper could not carry out any non-domestic work, or take up, or join or establish any business other than the contracted domestic work, whether paid or unpaid, in Hong Kong.”

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Those who violate the rule “are liable to prosecution and upon conviction face a maximum fine of $50,000 and up to two years' imprisonment. Aiders and abettors are also liable to prosecution and penalties," the spokesman said

As a standard procedure, Immigration officers conducted an initial screening of those arrested – who fall under the category of vulnerable persons, including illegal workers, illegal immigrants, sex workers and foreign domestic helpers -- to ascertain whether they are trafficking in persons (TIP) victims.

Among the signs they look for are TIP elements such as threats and coercion in the recruitment phase and the nature of exploitation.

Identified TIP victims will be provided with various forms of support and assistance, including urgent intervention, medical services, counselling, shelter or temporary accommodation and other supporting services. The ImmD calls on TIP victims to report crimes to the relevant departments immediately.

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No-show at court worsens Pinoy’s case of stealing 2 shirts, pants

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Kwun Tong Court (photo from Google Maps)

A Filipino charged with stealing two t-shirts and two pairs of pants plunged into deeper trouble today after he failed to show up for a hearing today at the Kowloon City Court, resulting in an arrest warrant being issued against him.

A. Delfino, 24 years old, is accused of theft for allegedly taking the clothes belonging to a Chinese, from outside a room in the New Lucky House on Jordan Road last July 16.

Acting Principal Magistrate Ko Wai-hung ordered his arrest after he did not come forward when his case was called, and court personnel confirmed he was not just outside the court.

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Delfino has no fixed address in Hong Kong, according to information filed by police.

Meanwhile, at the Kwun Tong court, domestic helper Riza Gamba was given another chance to prepare for her defense against a charge of theft after she appeared without a lawyer.

Gamba, aged 42, is accused of stealing $1,401.90 worth of food and drink from Fresh Supermarket in Lohas Park in Tseung Kwan O, consisting of one pack of apples, one bottle of sake,one bottle of wine, two cans of fruit cocktail, one pack of pork knuckles, two packs of pork chop, one pack of roasted pork belly, three cans of condensed milk, two recycling bags, one pack of cream cheese and one pack of cherry tomato.

When asked why she had no lawyer, having been represented in the previous hearing, Gamba said she lost track of the requirements because she was depressed.

“You are facing a criminal charge. You should take it seriously,” Chief Magistrate So Wai-tak said, advising her to go to the Duty Lawyer Service, which had already provide her a lawyer for free.

“I give you a last chance,” he said as he gave her a six-week adjournment to Oct.7.

Magistrate So set her free on $500 bail.

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Filipina pleads guilty at start of trial for 3 cases

Posted on 25 August 2024 No comments

 

The pavement where the offenses were committed (Google maps photo)

A Filipina domestic helper arrested in Central for selling a fake t-shirt, was jailed for six weeks after she pleaded guilty to three offenses at the start of her trial Friday (Aug. 23) at Eastern Court.

The trial was set last June 24 after Bianca Inocencio, 36 years old, pleaded not guilty, to selling a t-shirt with a fake label, possession of 26 t-shirts with fake brand labels, and breach of her condition of stay for doing business while working as a domestic helper.

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Deputy Magistrate Paul Yip had actually sentenced Inocencio to six weeks for each of the charges, but made the jail terms run at the same time.

Inocencio  was arrested by officers from the Customs and Excise Department on Jan. 14 on the pavement near Prince’s Bldg. and near MTR Exit K for allegedly selling a t-shirt with a forged Adidas trademark, in violation of the Trade Description Ordinance.

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She was also charged with possession of goods with forged trademarks, namely 19 T-shirts with the Adidas mark, 15 Nike and two Puma.

When the officers found out during the investigation that she was a domestic helper, they also charged her with violation of the Immigration Ordinance and Immigration Regulations.

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Filipino misses drug case hearing, ordered arrested

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West Kowloon Courthouse

A Filipino accused of drug possession and overstaying has put himself in deeper trouble when he failed to show up a hearing of his case at West Kowloon Court Friday (Aug. 24).

Principal Magistrate Ivy Chui issued a warrant of arrest against Gian Edward Aldea, 35 years old, forfeited his cash bail and ordered that he not be allowed to post a police bail in case he is arrested.

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Aldea, who is unemployed, is facing two charges filed by the Tsuen Wan Police last May 24.

The first charge, possession of a dangerous drug in violation of the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance, resulted from one plastic bag allegedly found on him during a routine police chek last April 11 at  Lo Tak Court in Tsuen Wan, New Territories.

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The plastic bag contained 0.85 gram of a crystalline solid containing methamphetamine hydrochloride, otherwise known a shabu or ice.

During investigation it was also discovered that Aldea had overstayed his visa, which was valid until April 1, resulting in police filing a charge of breach of condtion of stay in violatun of the Immigration Ordinance.

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Stomach aneurysm caused death of ex-congen, colleagues say

Posted on 24 August 2024 No comments

 

ASec Raly Tejada lies in state at Arlington Chapels in QC

Many friends and colleagues of Assistant Foreign Secretary Raly Tejada, who also served as the Philippine consul general to Hong Kong until last year, continue to express shock and sadness over his untimely passing last Tuesday,  Aug. 20, at the age of 53.

Among them is Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Antonio Morales, who was among the first to attend the wake for Tejada at the Arlington Memorial Chapels in Quezon City which began yesterday.

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Morales, who preceded Tejada as consul general in Hong Kong, disclosed that a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, was what triggered Tejada’s death.

Medical literature indicate that the so-called triple A disease, which pertains to the swelling of the aorta, or the main blood vessel that leads away from the heart, down through the abdomen to the rest of the body- is often fatal.

USec Morales was among the early mourners for his HK successor

Morales said Tejada was alone in his flat along Roxas Boulevard and was already dressed to attend a meeting with Secretary Enrique A. Manalo at 10am that morning, when he apparently collapsed. As he was never late for meetings, DFA staff members were hurriedly dispatched to check on him.

Tejada reportedly still had a pulse when he was found at about noon. He was rushed to nearby San Juan de Dios Hospital, but never regained consciousness.

Also among the first to express shock and sadness over his passing is current Consul General Germinia Aguilar-Usudan, who was his deputy for the entire four years that he was head of post in Hong Kong, from December 2019 to December 2023.

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Until now hindi ako makapaniwala (I cannot believe it). I’m still in shock,” said Congen Usudan. “He was a good man. DFA needs people like him.”

Usudan said what made the news more shocking was that Tejada was relatively young and was a fitness buff. He was known to play basketball regularly and was so careful with his health that he managed to escape being infected with Covid-19 even while he shepherded the community through the three years of the pandemic.

Also expressing sadness at his passing was Ambassador Tess Dizon-De Vega, who was also posted in Hong Kong in the early 2000s as deputy consul general.

She said in a Facebook post, “Farewell to a dear colleague and one of the best in our country’s diplomatic service - I am still in shock at the sad news. Assec Raly Tejada was a fellow Hong Kong PCG alum and a steady source of sound advice and insights through the years. I will remember him best when he took over the helm of one of our most challenging Posts, hitting the ground running from Day 1 with a deep sense of service. Padayon Panero.”

At Arlington, also among the early mourners were Overseas Workers Welfare Administration chief Arnell Ignacio, who joined former welfare officer to Hong Kong Virsie Tamayao; and spouses Edgar and Marifi Guibone, formerly of the assistance to nationals section.

Tejada's widow, Vivian (in black) speaks with OWWA's Ignacio and Tamayao

Ambassador-designate to Romania, Noel Servigon, who also served as consul general in Hong Kong, came earlier today.

Meanwhile, a memorial mass was held at the Consulate on Thursday, attended mostly by staff and Filipino residents and community leaders.

A second mass will be held tomorrow, Sunday, 5pm, also at the Consulate, to accommodate the many overseas Filipino workers who wish to say a final farewell to one of the country’s friendliest congens in Hong Kong.

A book of condolences has also been set up at the Consulate, and among the first to sign it was Hong Kong’s Secretary for Labour and Manpower Chris Sun, who also sent a floral wreath.

The Condolence Book will be available for signing during office hours, 9am to 4pm, until Aug. 29.

The Condolence Book at the Consulate

Tejada is survived by his Hong Kong-born wife, Vivian, his mother Lily, and three siblings.

His remains will be at Arlington until Aug 27, after which they will be transferred to the Department of Foreign Aairs for a private memorial service on Aug. 28. Interment will be held later on the same day at Loyola Memorial Park in Marikina City.

(Tejada was a lawyer and career diplomat. He obtained his bachelor’s degree from the University of the Philippines Diliman, his Juris Doctor degree from the San Sebastian College of Law, his Master of Public Management at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, where he was Public Policy Fellow.

He served with the DFA for nearly three decades, with Hong Kong his first foreign assignment a vice consul in 2000. After three years, he was assigned to Geneva, Switzerland to serve as first secretary to the Philippine Mission to the United Nations.

After his mandatory recall to the home office, he was posted briefly as deputy consul general in Vancouver, Canada, then as consul general in Guangzhou, China from 2011 to 2015.

From 2017 to 2019 he was posted as deputy head of mission and consul general at the Philippine Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, before being moved to Hong Kong as head of post and consul general, from 2019 to 2023.

Thursday mass at the HK Consulate, which Tejada headed through the protests and the pandemic 

Under his leadership, the consulate received the Best Organization Award and Best Assistance-To-Nationals Award in the 2021 DFA Praise Awards.

He was designated as assistant secretary in charge of the legal division in DFA early this year, a post he kept until his death. 

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Swedish businessman faces ‘lengthy sentence’ for rape of Nepalese maid

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Ekstrom is shown leaving court during the trial (Photo by Kyle Lam of HK Free Press)

A Swedish businessman described as having acted out of character faces up to a life in jail for raping his foreign domestic helper from Nepal two years ago. 

A seven-member jury unanimously voted to convict Patrik Tobias Ekstrom, 36, of a count of rape and another of buggery without consent against his helper, identified in court only as “X,” in a decision handed down at the Court of First Instance on Aug. 22.

In mitigation, his lawyer, Simon So, said his client suffered from bipolar disorder at the time of the offense, which happened on the day Ekstrom learned that his wife had left him, and had taken their three children with her to her home country of Japan.

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So asked the court to allow Ekstrom to post bail pending the submission of a psychiatric and psychological report on him, but prosecutor Diane Crebbin opposed the application.

Recorder Derek Chan, who presided over the trial, rejected the application, saying the defendant was facing a “lengthy” sentence. He set down the sentencing on Nov. 11.

Under Hong Kong law, the maximum penalty for rape and non-consensual buggery is life imprisonment.

On the night of the rape, X said Ekstrom returned to his Shek O home late on Oct.27, 2022, drunk, and forced her into his bedroom while saying “I love you, I want you”. He threatened to kill her if she did not give in to his demand for sex.

The next morning, X packed up her belongings and left the house, then filed a complaint with the police. Ekstrom was arrested that night.

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But Ekstrom said in his defence that it was the helper who initiated sex with him as she wanted to give him “comfort’ after his family left him.

He also claimed they had consensual sex twice in July, when he gave her money each time, and after which the helper had asked for help in repaying another debt. 

The court heard that Ekstrom had advanced four months of X’s salary earlier so she could pay off a debt.

In his closing statement, the defence counsel pointed to a statement made by a forensic pathologist who examined X after the incident, that there were no recent identifiable injuries on X, including on her genital areas. So said this was inconsistent with the forceful sex that the victim had claimed.

But Crebbin belied all the defense claims, saying X would not have left her employer’s house and put her job on the line if she had consented to the rape. In her evidence, X admitted that the family had been very kind to her,

Crebbin said Ekstrom had fabricated the alleged sexual encounters in July to explain the rape that took place in October.

She also dismissed Ekstrom’s claim about feeling devastated about his wife and children leaving, saying it was not believable that he would accept the alleged advances from X under such circumstances.

In mitigation, the defense counsel said Ekstrom was diagnosed with bipolar disorder two years ago, shortly after his family fell apart.

So said that up until then, the defendant had been a “successful businessman”, and incurred only a drink-driving conviction about 10 years before the rape.

He told the court that after the rape, Ekstrom was found guilty of criminally damaging property in a hospital and in a police vehicle, with both incidents occurring after he was found walking naked in public.

He added the defendant was also involved in a car crash and made a false report of burglary to police when he was suffering from the mental disorder.

He called on the court to consider Ekstrom’s mental state in coming up with an appropriate sentence.

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