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Pinay gets more than her claim after employer’s illegal acts revealed

Posted on 10 October 2019 No comments
Pinay DH got lucky after she revealed her employer's illegal acts in the Tribuna

By Vir B. Lumicao

A Filipina domestic worker won a $5,000 settlement from her employer after she told the Labour Tribunal that she was made to stay and work in the flat of the employer’s mother whenever the couple who hired her went on a holiday.

Hui Ni Sha, who had a counterclaim for wages in lieu of notice against Leah Espiritu for allegedly leaving her house on Apr 29, was also found to have dismissed her.

Espiritu had claimed only a total of $3,594.20 against Hui for allegedly dismissing her without notice on May 3.

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Presiding Officer David Chum said the employer was willing to pay Espiritu’s claim of $1,721.40 in arrears in wages, $100 food and travel allowance, and $1,772.80 for an air ticket, items that were unsettled in their previous meeting at the Tribunal.

Chum said Hui was also refunding $500 of a $700 deduction she made from Espiritu’s salary for what she called an advanced holiday on Apr 23-27, when she and her husband were on a holiday.

But the Filipina declared that on those days, she was made to work in the house of Hui’s mother, as was the practice each time the couple went on holiday.
Chum said that was a breach of Espiritu’s condition of stay. He reminded her that if she was taken to a place other then her employer’s address to work there, that would be a criminal offense.

Going to the main issue, Espiritu said she was fired without written notice on May 3, while Hui accused her of leaving the house without notice on Apr 29.

“I told her she must complete her contract. She just gave me $700 for the holiday she took. She left the house on Apr 29 and I never saw her again,” the employer said.
Chum told Hui that he has an Immigration document, a notice of termination that the employer signed on May 3 stating that the helper left on May 29.

Hui’s husband, in the gallery butted in and gave the woman instructions in Putonghua. Chum paused and scolded the man, warning him that if he interrupted again, he would charge him with contempt of court. The man kept silent.

The presiding officer then warned Hui she could be charged criminally for misrepresentation for putting the last working day as May 29. Hui said she had already written Immigration about that on May 3 but did not give the Tribunal a copy.

Chum said the fact was Hui fired her maid on Apr 29 and put the date as May 3. By doing so, Hui was allowing the maid to work illegally in the underground market. He said if the case proceeds to trial, the problem would come out it could reach Immigration.

He advised the two parties to discuss and resolve their dispute. After several minutes of discussion, Hui agreed to pay her former maid a total of $5,000, more than what she was claiming.
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Filipina DH who accepted drug parcel on trial at High Court

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Serious cases like drug trafficking are heard at the High Court

By Vir B. Lumicao

Filipina domestic helper Analyn de Leon, who stepped in as a last-minute recipient of a drug parcel from Africa, is on trial at the High Court for drug trafficking.

De Leon who is being held without bail, pleaded not guilty to the charge at the opening of her jury trial on Oct 10 before Judge Remedios D’Almada. Her former employers were in court to give her support.

The prosecution said it based its case against her on an exchange of phone calls and messages with the man believed to be the sender before her arrest on May 4 last year.
The prosecutor told the jury its task is to decide whether De Leon had prior knowledge of the parcel’s content, which Customs investigators said was 495 grams of crystalline powder containing methamphetamine with a street value of $334,530.

Prosecution lawyer Ken Ng said De Leon was arrested on the afternoon of May 4 by a Customs officer posing as a DHL man who delivered the parcel with drugs to her employer’s flat in Yoho Midtown estate, Yuen Long.

Ng said the DHL parcel, declared as dried plums, arrived at the Customs Airport cargo centre on the afternoon of Apr 23 from Cotonou, Benin.
 
A drug package found inside a suitcase of a Filipina tourist at HK International Airport 
A Customs officer who noticed suspicious items inside the parcel opened it and found the drugs. The attached waybill indicated the recipient’s name, address and telephone number, as well as the declared content of the parcel and the sender’s name.

Named as recipient was a man named Burnett Mobuka Oguye with an address at a Mirador Mansion in Tsimshatsui. The Customs officer called the phone number listed on the waybill and arranged with a man believed to be Burnett a delivery of the parcel on the afternoon of Apr 24.

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The officer posing as a DHL delivery man went to the address, but staff in the guesthouse said there was no such resident there.

The next day, Apr 25, the Customs enquiry hotline received a call from Burnett asking why the parcel was not delivered in the evening. He arranged for it to be delivered that night, but at the last minute called up again and gave an excuse as to why a delivery could not be made that evening.
As the parcel remained undelivered, the sender sent a message requesting a change of consignee. He gave the name of De Leon as the new recipient, as well as her address at the employer’s flat in Yoho Midtown.

The prosecutor said the Customs officer called up De Leon on May 2 and the delivery was arranged for May 4. When De Leon received the parcel after signing the delivery receipt, she was arrested by the officer disguised as a DHL man.

The trial continues.
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PCG, Polo asked for regular updates on HK crisis

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Images like these, from a day of violence across Hong Kong on China's National Day,
 have spooked Philippine government officials


By The SUN

Fears over the worsening political unrest in Hong Kong has Philippine government officials at the edge of their seats, and have ordered their top diplomats in the city to send regular updates on the situation here.

The anxiety escalated recently when foreign domestic worker Joy Palmera collapsed on Oct 6 after inhaling toxic fumes from tear gas hurled by police at protesters in Wanchai.

The news that Palmera was rushed to hospital unconscious reached Manila, and frantic officials at the Department of Foreign Affairs reportedly asked the Hong Kong post to give an immediate update.

Luckily, Palmera recovered and was sent home the next day, but this did not stop the home office from badgering their officers here to keep sending updates as frequently as every hour.
According to the officer-in-charge of the Philippine Overseas Labor Office, Antonio Villafuerte, his instruction is to send updates on the “present situation as much as possible daily and hourly.”

Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III is said to be monitoring the situation closely, apparently to help him determine what action to take just in case the welfare of Filipino migrant workers here are put on the line.

But Villafuerte said that as of now, the political crisis has not reached a point where emergency measures such as the mass evacuation of our workers have to be undertaken.
Previously, Bello said in interviews in Manila that he was considering stopping the deployment of workers to Hong Kong because of the tense situation, but this did not happen.

Villafuerte said Bello later told Polo that he would defer to the DFA on how best to respond to the crisis in Hong Kong.

The DFA has already issued an advisory to all Filipinos to avoid traveling to Hong Kong, resulting in a massive drop in the number of tourist arrivals from the Philippines.
This was after Jetro Pioquinto, a Filipino dancer in Hong Kong Disneyland was arrested during a police crackdown on protesters in Mong Kok on Aug. 3.

However, both Polo and the Consulate say the number of Filipinos arriving for work in Hong Kong has remained steady – at least for now.

But with the economy on a downward trajectory, job security, including those of domestic workers, could be in peril.

The situation could deteriorate further in the wake of a ban on the use of masks in public gatherings imposed by Chief Executive Carrie Lam on Sept. 29, which led to an unprecedented chaos across Hong Kong.

Many fear the violence could escalate ahead of the resumption on Oct. 16 of the Legislative Council sessions, during which the Chief Executive’s exercise of her emergency powers that led to the mask ban will be reviewed.
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It’s back to manual contract processing at Polo after online system revoked

Posted on 08 October 2019 No comments
Polo office building in Wanchai

By Vir B. Lumicao

From automated processing of  employment contracts, the Philippine Overseas Labor Office has reverted to going through the documents manually, all because the new system meant to make the work faster and more efficiently has been junked.

The electronic system that Polo used previously has already been disconnected, and was supposed to be replaced with a new one in line with a contract signed between former Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre and Polaris Tools Limited.

But since the agreement was scrapped by Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III last month for supposedly being a “midnight deal,” the processing of work contracts has reverted to the  pre-2009 era, when the job was done by hand.
Polo Office-in-Charge Antonio Villafuerte said he and the rest of the Polo officers who check the work contracts are just awaiting instructions from DOLE on what to do next.

“Wala pa ngang instruction sa amin kung ano ang (gagawin), magku-query na lang kami kung ano ang gagawin namin dito,” he said.

“Mahihirapan kami kung mahihirapan kami. Doon sa mga submission ng contracts, yung checking ng documents ay nagma-manual na kami. Unlike before, they could submit through online, ngayon wala na,” Villafuerte said.
Before Polaris clinched the deal for the new system, all contracts submitted by employment agencies were processed with help from the old system installed by the previous provider, Employeasy.

Dela Torre said he decided to upgrade the system so Polo could also have a data base that tracked workers and employers on the watchlist, as well as agencies that violated the terms of their accreditation.
But after a selection process that resulted in Polaris bagging the deal, an unsigned letter addressed to Bello purportedly from “agencies seeking justice”, alleged irregularities and imputed corruption on Dela Torre.
 
Dela Torre (middle) signed contract with Polaris' Lindsay Ernst while welfare officer Marivic Clarin watched
On Sept 25, an investigation team led by Undersecretary Claro Arellano recommended revoking the contract as it was supposedly done with “manifest haste and a lack of transparency”.

Dela Torre has hit back at the decision, alleging lack of due process as the team did not talk to him, or anyone from Polaris. He has posted comments on social media saying he is contemplating legal action to clear his name.
With about 700 contracts being submitted to Polo each day, one would think the processing of the documents now takes longer than usual, and has overwhelmed staff.

Far from it, says Villafuerte, as his staff reportedly finds manual processing faster than electronic.

But he admits Polo now finds it difficult to keep track of employers who are on the watch list, meaning those with a record for abusive behavior or of committing contract violations, can now easily apply to hire a new Filipino domestic worker.


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