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Malacanang keeps firm on travel ban despite diplomats’ appeal

Posted on 13 February 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Ambassador Sta Roman says top DFA officials have called for the lifting of the travel ban

The Philippine government has remained firm in its decision to ban flights to and from Hong Kong, Macau and China, despite appeals from its top diplomats for a partial lifting so Filipinos who work and live in the affected areas could leave the country.

According to Philippine Ambassador to China Jose Santiago Sta Romana, top officials of the Department of Foreign Affairs have interceded on behalf of the thousands of Filipinos who have been left stranded since the ban was imposed on Feb 2.

“Senior officials at the DFA are lobbying to lift this travel ban and allow those with valid work permits to return to China, Hong Kong and Macau (and now Taiwan), but the decision will be made by Malacanang, upon the recommendation of an inter-agency committee led by DOH (Department of Health),” Ambassador Sta Romana said in a message on Feb 12.
Leading the call is Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin, Jr., who said on Twitter that he had advised President Rodrigo Duterte to allow the stranded workers to return to their jobs.

Tagging a report that the first Filipina to be quarantined in Hong Kong had been released after showing no signs of the virus, Locsin said: “This is important to my advice to the President to finally grant my wish to let our domestic workers return to their good Chinese employers in Hong Kong who want them back.”

But five days after the tweet, Malacanang did not only keep the travel restriction, but expanded it to include Taiwan, which it said was part of greater China.
 
Some of the estimated 20,000 affected OFWs seeking financial aid from OWWA
Consul General Raly Tejada has also repeatedly expressed concern about the plight of the tens of thousands of Filipinos affected by the ban. These include not only migrant workers but also Filipino residents who work and live with their families in Hong Kong.

In his most recent show of support, ConGen Tejada said he was forwarding to the Home Office the sentiments expressed by those who signed an online petition for the recall of the ban, which was put up on the social media platform, change.org.
On Feb. 3, he also monitored keenly a cabinet meeting called by President Duterte to discuss the measures taken to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus, and was disheartened when no mention was made about the ban’s impact on Filipinos in Hong Kong.

The ban was imposed after the Philippines reported its first two confirmed cases of coronavirus infection. The two were a couple from Wuhan city, the epicenter of the contagion in China, who arrived in the Philippines on Jan. 21.

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The woman was said to be still undergoing treatment in San Lazaro Hospital in Manila, but her 39-year-old companion had died just before the ban took effect.

The Philippines has reported three confirmed infections, including the couple, and 70 other suspected cases.

Unifil HK calls the ban an 'exaggerated response' to the coronavirus outbreak
Migrant organization United Filipinos in Hong Kong has denounced the travel ban as coming too late, as it was declared only after a death from the coronavirus had occurred, and after hundreds (if not thousands) of Chinese were allowed to enter the Philippines freely.

But the group also called the ban an “exaggerated response” for including Hong Kong and Macau.

The group called on the government to allow Filipinos to return to Hong Kong, especially OFWs whose jobs have been left hanging in the balance because they are unable to leave.

The call has been reiterated by signatories of the online petition, many of whom are Hong Kong residents who decry that they’re being deprived of their work and homes, and like many of their migrant worker compatriots, are in danger of losing their jobs.
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2 Pinays plead guilty to overstaying 15 and 28 years in HK

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao
 
Two Filipina former domestic workers have pleaded guilty to separate charges of breaching their conditions of stay by overstaying their work visas for 15 and 28 years, respectively.
An overstayer (left) asks help from Consulate
before surrendering

Crestin Diaz, 53, and Anita Hilario, 71, appeared in Kwun Tong court on Wednesday, Feb 12, before Magistrate Ko Wai-hing, and admitted their offenses.

The prosecution said Diaz surrendered to Immigration authorities on Feb 5 after overstaying in Hong Kong since June 14, 2004.

She came to Hong Kong to work as a domestic helper on Dec 13, 2002 but was terminated prematurely on May 31, 2004. She failed to find a new employer in the 14 days she was allowed to remain in Hong Kong, and decided to overstay.
Her defense counsel from the Duty Lawyer Service pleaded for leniency, citing Diaz’s guilty plea. He cited her advanced age, and said the Filipina wanted to rejoin her family as soon as possible.

Magistrate Ko sentenced Diaz to 10 months in prison.

In a separate case, Hilario pleaded guilty to overstaying in Hong Kong for 28 years and five months after her work visa as a domestic helper expired on Sept 4, 1991.
The prosecution said Hilario surrendered to Immigration on Feb 10. After checking her records, officers found out that she came to Hong Kong in 1989 and did not leave when her visa ran out.

Ko ordered Diaz remanded in custody after taking note of the woman’s age, and said he wanted to see a background report on her first before sentencing on Mar 4.
Diaz was earlier reported in The SUN as having sought help from the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section in surrendering to the authorities.

She decided to surrender after both her feet swelled up and she started having difficulty breathing.


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Third Filipina reportedly quarantined with employers

Posted on No comments
By The SUN


Choi Fung Court in Ngau Chi Wan
A third Filipina domestic helper has reportedly been taken to the quarantine center in Saikung, along with her employers and two wards, after the 70-year-old father of her male employer tested positive for novel coronavirus infection on Feb 9.

A spokesman for the Centre for Health Protection has declined to confirm the nationality of the maid, but some of her friends told The SUN she is a Filipina.

Consul General Raly Tejada said he was still checking the report.
In an earlier press release, the CHP said the maid, her employers and two wards, lived in a separate flat but on the same building as the patient in Ngau Chi Wan, Kowloon.

The maid and her employer’s family members were taken away from their flat in Choi Fung Court after the elderly man tested positive for the coronavirus at United Christian Hospital.

The CHP statement said the elderly patient had developed cough, chills and shortness of breath since Jan 30 and diarrhea since Feb 1. He consulted two private doctors but eventually went to the hospital when his symptoms persisted.
He is now in stable condition.

His medical information showed he did not travel outside Hong Kong during the incubation period and mainly stayed in his flat, or his son’s home in the same building.

The spokesman said that in line with health protocols, the patient’s close contacts who had been quarantined will be released after 14 days if they are found free of the virus.

Two other Filipina domestic workers had earlier been quarantined. The first, who lived in a flat in Ma On Shan where two elderly guests from Wuhan had tested positive for the virus, was discharged on Feb 7 without developing any symptoms.

Still under quarantine is another Filipina who lives in Whampo Garden  in Hung Hom


The second was quarantined on Jan. 31 after her 39-year-old male employer was diagnosed with the disease, and subsequently died of heart failure. He was the first to die of the infection in Hong Kong, and the second outside of China.
The employer’s 72-year-old mother who lived in the same flat in Whampoa Garden in Hung Hom, also tested positive for the virus. The Filipina, however, was asymptomatic.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong confirmed its 50th patient today, a 51-year-old man, the colleague of a woman who attended a hotpot gathering in Kwun Tong linked to several infections.

Thirteen people who joined the family gathering on Jan 26 or came into contact with some of those present have now tested positive for the virus.

Nine of them were reported to have contracted the virus on Feb 9, the biggest cluster of cases reported in one day.

Meanwhile, the first coronavirus patient to have recovered from the disease was discharged from Princess Margaret Hospital today.
The first cured patient was hospitalized in Princess Margaret Hospital in Kowloon

According to the Hospital Authority’s chief manager of patient safety and risk management, Dr Sara Ho, many of the coronavirus patients are in stable condition, with several more likely to be released soon.


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Fears rise that Phl travel ban to HK will be extended to Mar 28

Posted on 12 February 2020 No comments
By The SUN

PAL, Cathay and Cebu Pacific now say they will resume their HK-Manila flights on Mar 28

There is growing fear that the travel ban that prevents thousands of Filipinos from returning to Hong Kong to work, study and live with their families, ostensibly to protect them from the coronavirus outbreak, will be extended for another month.

This is the result of new advisories from major airlines that fly from Hong Kong to key cities in the Philippines that moved the resumption of their flights from Feb 29 to Mar 28.

However, Consul General Raly Tejada said there has been no official word from Manila on when the temporary travel ban imposed on Feb. 2 might be lifted.

Neither has there been a reply to Hong Kong’s formal request for Filipinos to be allowed back in the city.

ConGen Tejada reiterated that the Consulate, along with the Department of Foreign Affairs, supports the call for the ban to be lifted, especially for Filipino migrant workers and residents in Hong Kong.

Philippine Airlines, Cathay Pacific and Cebu Pacific all issued the uniform advisory today, Feb 11, as Taiwan was added to the list of banned destinations for Filipinos departing from Manila and other international airports. (see the PAL advisory here: https://www.facebook.com/notes/philippine-airlines/pal-extends-cancellation-of-chinahong-kongmacau-flights-to-march-28/495338144729860/)
According to Philippine immigration officials, Taiwan should have been included in the original ban imposed on Feb 2 that prohibited Filipinos traveling to China, Hong Kong and Macau, because the city state is part of “greater China”.

Taiwan had tried to protest the ban, but after a day of conflicting statements from Philippine government officials, it was kept in place.
 
HK-bound passengers were shocked by the ban which came into immediate effect on Feb 2
To date, only the Philippines has barred its own nationals from leaving the country for destinations apart from China, although several governments have raised travel alerts for countries heavily affected by the new coronavirus outbreak.

United Filipinos in Hong Kong, which has been leading the campaign for the immediate lifting of the ban, calls the airlines’ announcements worrying.
Unifil chairperson Dolores Balladares said that if the travel ban is prolonged, “mas maraming maapektuhang OFWs , residents and their families, at lalong mabibingit sa peligro ang trabaho ng mga migrante, new and old, kahit pa nga matatagal na sa amo.”

She said it is highly likely that employers will not be able to wait for a long time for their much-needed helper to return, and will just opt to terminate their contract.

“Ang epekto nito sa OFWs, mawawalan sila ng siguradong income at mababaon sa utang dahil hindi naman pwedeng kumain, pag-aralin ang mga anak at magbayad ng bills."

In Taiwan alone, she said 200 OFWs were immediately affected by the last-minute ban.

The same is true with returning residents stranded in the Philippines now, she said.  Their income could be cut at the very least if they’re unable to get back to work for a long time.

On top of this, those who don’t have their own place to live in the Philippines also face shelling a lot of money for food and accommodation while waiting to be allowed back to Hong Kong.

“Maling mali ang blanket ban na ginawa ni Presidente Duterte, hindi masusing pinag-isipan kung ano ang epekto sa tatamaan ng ban.”
 
Balladares says Migrante is inviting those affected by the ban to speak at a press conference on Feb 17
Unifil-Migrante is now working closely with Migrante International in Manila in organizing a press conference scheduled on Feb 17, during which those stranded by the ban are encouraged to speak about how it has impacted their life and work.

The move is aimed at showing a united front among various sectors affected by the travel ban, and also make the problem more real and immediate for those who are in the Philippines, who may have been made to believe that it’s a necessary health measure.

The press conference will be held at Migrante International, Episcopal Mission Center compound, 275 E. Rodriguez Sr. Avenue, Brgy. Kalusugan, Quezon City, Metro Manila. Their mobile hotline in the Philippines is (63) 921-2709079. In Hong Kong, the number to call is 9747 2986


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