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Agency staff arrested for failing to give job after collecting $30k

Posted on 28 February 2021 No comments

By The SUN 

The woman allegedly failed to provide the promised jobs to an FDH's relatives

A female staff at an employment agency was arrested on Friday, Feb 26, for her alleged failure to provide promised jobs to relatives of a foreign domestic helper after collecting $30,000 in fees.

According to a press statement released in the government website, Hong Kong Customs received information that the 45-year-old woman had allegedly claimed she could secure arrange for relatives and friends of the FDH to come and work in Hong Kong.

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But after receiving about $30,000 as fee, she failed to provide the jobs and did not return the helper’s money.

The woman was arrested and investigated by customs officers for alleged violation the Trade Descriptions Ordinance. She was subsequently released on bail pending further inquiry.

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Customs reminded traders to comply with requirements of the TDO and consumers to procure services only at reputable shops.

Under the TDO, it is an offense for a trader to accept payment for a product he intends not to supply, replaces it with a materially different product, or for which there is no basis to believe he can supply it within a specified or reasonable period.

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The maximum penalty upon conviction is a fine of $500,000 and a jail term of five years, the press release said.

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The public may report any suspected violations of the TDO to Customs' 24-hour hotline 2545 6182 or its dedicated crime-reporting email account (crimereport@customs.gov.hk). 

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3 Filipino DHs, Pakistani tourist found with coronavirus variant

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By Vir B. Lumicao 

The 3 Filipinos, 1 Pakistani and 1 Indonesian all tested positive at the airport

Three Filipino domestic workers and a Pakistani tourist (likely the spouse of a resident) who all tested positive for Covid-19 on arrival at Hong Kong airport have all been found to have the coronavirus variant, the Centre for Health Protection said today, Feb 28.

The two Filipino women and one man aged 30, 31 and 34, as well as the 43-year-old Pakistani woman all arrived on Feb 26. They and a 27-year-old Indonesian women were the five imported cases among 22 new cases reported today.

Dr Albert Au from the CHP’s Communicable Disease Branch, said there are now 47 cases in Hong Kong with different variants of Covid-19. These include 29 with the British variant, 4 with South African, and 3 with Brazilian variants. Eleven have yet to be classified.

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More than 10 preliminary positive cases were also reported, including a 23-year-old male cashier at LBC Express in World-Wide House in Central and in Yuen Long. The CHP said the patient, who lives in Tsuen Wan, had an unknown infection source.

Four of the 17 local cases also had untraceable sources of infection, bringing to 65 the number with unknown sources in the past two weeks.

Today’s new cases, comprising 10 men and 12 women aged 1 to 71 years old, pushed up the tally of infections in Hong Kong since January last year to 11,006.

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A Chinese restaurant in upscale K11 Musea mall in Tsimshatsui remained the focus of concern today as 10 more cases linked to the outbreak there had turned positive by midnight Saturday, bringing to 44 the total number from that cluster.

The new cases from Mr Ming’s Chinese Dining, believed to have started with a super spreader, included a close contact of a worker at the restaurant, two diners and seven close contacts of some patients in the cluster.

Au said about 100 close contacts had been placed in quarantine centers, meaning the number of cases could increase further during the incubation period in the coming days.

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“Meanwhile, we are still unable to get in touch with 10 diners from the restaurant and there could be a chance of community transmission from them,” Au said.

The cluster of cases in K11 Musea has now spread to 2 more shops

A 53-year-old woman who visited a Lilium by Gitone Cafe on the 5th floor at K11 Musea also tested positive. She works in Kwun Tong and lives in Ma Wan. Between Feb 22 and 23, she attended many seminars and workshops in multiple locations.

A total of nine employees, 22 diners and 13 close contacts have been infected so far, including a close contact of a diner who works in a law firm in Wan Chai and a nurse from Tuen Mun who works at a clinic in Tai Kok Tsui.

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The virus claimed one more life overnight, with the Queen Mary Hospital announcing the death of a 73-year-old male patient last night. He tested preliminary positive for Covid-19 and was admitted to the Tseung Kwan O Hospital last Nov 23, before being moved to intensive care at QMH.

As at 9am today, a total of 218 confirmed patients were being treated in 22 public hospitals, at the Asia World Expo community treatment facility at the airport and the North Lantau Hospital, said Dr Sara Ho from the Hospital Authority.

Ho said 17 of the patients were in critical condition, 13 in serious condition and the remaining 188 patients in stable condition.

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Covid-19 cases linked to TST restaurant grow to 41

Posted on 27 February 2021 No comments

By The SUN 

State-of-the-art K11 Musea mall will shut for 2 days and its staff given virus tests


A total of 41 Covid-19 cases, consisting of 34 confirmed and 7 preliminary positive, were today linked to an upmarket Chinese restaurant in a Tsim Sha Tsui mall.

As a result, Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan from the Centre for Health Protection announced at a press briefing today, Feb 27, that all staff at K11 Musea mall where Ming’s Chinese Dining is located, will have to undergo mandatory testing.

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Chuang said that of the 33 new coronavirus cases detected overnight, 15 were linked to the restaurant, consisting of nine diners, four staff and two close contacts. And among about 20 preliminary cases, 11 were also related to the cluster.

Nineteen other infections were previously reported from the restaurant cluster, which is suspected to have originated from a female super spreader who cleaned tables there on Feb 19, when most of the infected diners had lunch.

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A total of 76 patrons had been to Ming’s restaurant on that date, and Chuang said 61 had been traced and sent to a quarantine center. Health officials are still tracking down the 15 others.

A 'super spreader' in Mr Ming's restaurant is believed to be behind the mass infection

Meantime, a 34-year-old female staff at Cartier’s boutique in K11 Musea was also among those who tested preliminary positive today.

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As a result, the mall will be closed for two days from tomorrow for disinfection, and for all staff at its tenanted units to undergo virus testing. The testing of staff will be done every two weeks for the next two months, and only those who test negative will be allowed to resume work.

Chuang also called on people who had been to the mall on or after Feb 19 to get tested and pay attention to their health.

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“We are not sure about the exact risks of those visitors to the K11 Musea. Since we have observed a possibly super spreading event in that restaurant and there are also quite a number of staff and patrons getting infected, it is possible the infections may not just occur in the restaurant because the staff may be infectious during entrance or in the mall,” she said.

Of the new cases, 31 were locally acquired, and 10 of them had unknown sources.

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The two imported cases were a 29year-old female domestic worker from the Philippines and a 44-year-old male returnee from India. Both were asymptomatic when the tested positive at the airport. 

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Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine arrives in Hong Kong

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The SUN 

The delicate cargo is unloaded from a Cathay Pacific plane that flew it from Frankfurt

The first batch of 1 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine co-produced by US and German drug companies Pfizer and BioNTech arrived in Hong Kong today, Feb 27.

The shipment containing 585,000 doses of the vaccine which is being distributed in China by Fosun Pharmacy, was met by officials led by Secretary for the Civil Service Patrick Nip and Health Secretary Sophia Chan.

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The remaining doses are expected to be transported in Hong Kong early next month.

The Pfizer/BioNTech jab is the second to be made available in Hong Kong. It has the highest efficacy rate of 95%, but requires delicate handling as it needs to be stored in freezers at -70 degrees Celsius.

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The first vaccine from mainland firm Sinovac arrived a week ahead, and was first made available to top officials led by Chief Executive Carrie Lam on Monday, Feb 22. 

Yesterday, Hong Kong launched its first mass inoculation with the Sinovac vaccine, with thousands of people from priority groups signing up to be among the first to get it.

HK govt officials applaud as the vaccine shipment is wheeled past them

In a press statement today, the government said the BioNTech vaccine will be made available for those who prefer getting it through the online appointment system at www.covidvaccine.gov.hk starting next week.

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Hong Kong has procured a total of 7.5 million doses each from three drug companies, Sinovac, Pfizer/BioNTech, and the Anglo-Swedish group, AstraZeneca/University of Oxford, which is expected to arrive by the middle of the year.

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All residents can choose from any of the three kinds of vaccine. Inoculation will be on voluntary basis, and the government has set aside a $1 billion fund that will be used as compensation in case of any adverse result from the vaccines, which have all been approved for emergency use in Hong Kong.

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The Sinovac vaccine comes from inactivated virus, and is shown to have an efficacy rate of between 50.65% and 62.3%. Pfizer/BioNTech is a nucleic acid vaccine, while the one made by AstraZeneca/Oxford University is a viral vector vaccine, and has an efficacy rate of 76-81%.

All the vaccines need to be administered in two doses. For Sinovac, the recommended interval is 28 days, and for the Pfizer/BioNTech jab, it is 21 days.

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Migrants lash out at Polo for inaction on training fee refund

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By Daisy CL Mandap 

Fewer workers are signing up for refund claims because of the POEA referral

Several Filipino migrant groups are set to stage an online protest from 1pm to 2pm this Sunday, Feb 28, accusing the Philippine Overseas Labor Office of reneging on its duty to help OFWs seeking a refund of illegal fees collected from them by recruitment agencies in the Philippines.

The groups, led by United Filipinos in Hong Kong (Unifil-Migrante-HK) are particularly angry that Polo has been forwarding claims to the Philippine Overseas Administration Office in Manila without even informing the concerned workers. 

This was despite an agreement reached by Filipino community leaders with Labor Attache Melchor Dizon on Dec 6 last year, that all claims will be heard in Polo, with the Hong Kong counterpart of the Philippine agencies acting as respondent.

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It is only when no settlement is reached during a conciliation with the Hong Kong agency that the case is supposed to be forwarded to POEA for further action.

“This is causing distress and anxiety to many migrant domestic workers whose hard-earned money unscrupulously taken by agencies could have gone to their families or used to buy necessities here in Hong Kong,” said a statement issued by Unifil.

POEA letter from telling HK claimants their cases have been referred to them

How would they be able to follow up on their cases? They have to assign a member of the family or a friend to represent them in their cases in the Philippines. But they cannot be represented, as they do not have time to do it. This is why they filed their cases here so that they will be able to see it through. This is a source of consternation and major disappointment to overly-burdened OFWs.”

News of the instant referral of cases to POEA has flooded a Facebook page, Training Fee Refund Hong Kong, where claimants share posts about their concerns and experiences dealing with Polo.

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Nearly all of those who shared receiving notices of hearings from POEA said they filed their claims with Polo, and were not consulted or advised that their cases would be referred to Manila directly.

The news has turned off many would-be claimants from pursuing their cases. On Sunday last week, a sign-up desk set up by Unifil-Migrante on Chater Road recorded just about 20 Filipino migrant workers filling up forms to file claims. This was less than half of the number recorded in previous Sundays.

According to Unifil chairperson Dolores Balladares-Pelaez, about 2,000 FMWs have already filed claims, but only a handful had been called to Polo for a conciliation meeting with their Hong Kong agencies.

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And among those who managed to settle their claim with their agencies, only a fraction of what they paid in illegal fees to their recruitment agencies in the Philippines had been given back to them. Many said they were given only the equivalent of Php5,000, after paying between Php30,000 to Php50,000 to their Philippine recruiter.

Only one has reported being given back Php10,000 of the Php31,000 she paid – and that was only because she still had an existing NC2 certificate from Tesda (Technical Education and Skills Development Authority), meaning she should have been exempted from undergoing training all over again in the first place.

The measly settlement has prompted a call from Marites Palma of Social Justice for Migrant Workers, one of those pushing for the refund, to urge claimants not to accept such a small amount from their Hong Kong agencies. 

Training fee claimants have been crowding Polo on Sundays

Another leader of the refund campaign, Eman Villanueva of Bayan Muna Hong Kong and Macau, told Hong Kong-based claimants not to give in to suggestions that they should file their cases directly with POEA. 

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Villanueva said workers will lose out in such a case because they will have to file individual claims, weakening the campaign for agencies to be held accountable for charging illegal fees. He also said it would be difficult for a Hong Kong-based worker to pursue a claim in the Philippines as the complainant must personally appear, or designate a representative, during hearings before the POEA.

Further, he said: “Mismong si Labatt Dizon ang nagsabi na tatanggapin ang filing ng claims at gagawin ang mediation sa POLO. Kung hindi nya ito tutuparin at basta na lamang ipo-forward ang mga claims sa POEA, dapat singilin at papanagutin si Labatt Dizon.”

(Labatt Dizon himself said Polo would accept claims and act as mediator. If he won’t abide by this, and just forward the claims to POEA, we should hold Labatt Dizon accountable).

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There are also a lot of organizations, institutions and individuals helping claimants in Hong Kong, so it is much easier for cases to be resolved here, Villanueva added.

While the turn of events has dismayed most of those pursuing claims in Hong Kong, this is not the first time Polo had washed its hands off the illegal collection of fees by recruitment agencies, said Unifil-Migrante. In 2013, a similar thing happened, when thousands of illegal fee claims were all passed on to POEA, said the group.

The deluge in claims started on Nov 22 last year, after Dizon said during a meeting with a group of community leaders at the Consulate that Filipino workers deployed abroad should not be compelled to attend training, and pay for it. Employers who require training should pay for its cost, he said.

This was followed by a meeting with another group led by Balladares-Pelaez where Dizon said 170 OFWs had already filed claims, which Polo would hear through conciliation meetings between the workers and their agencies. 

It was only if conciliation had failed that the case would be endorsed to POEA for further action, he said. 

Dizon also said claims for agency fees paid within the past three years could be filed with Polo for conciliation. But an extra month allowance should be given for Polo to schedule the conciliation, and then forward to POEA within the required period if no settlement is reached.

Several groups have been helping workers pursue refund claims

In its statement, Unifil also hit out at Polo for allegedly being selective in handing out the Dole Akap financial assistance of US$100 to workers whose work has been adversely affected by the pandemic, and not extending the application period long enough for all qualified recipients to file a claim.

Polo was also criticized for being selective in accepting workers to its shelter, and in not extending help to those who recently arrived in Hong Kong and are under hotel quarantine.

“They are actually performing subpar to non-government institutions (which) have their own shelters here in Hong Kong and (are) helping as many people as they can. It has obviously delegated the task to these institutions when it should be the government's responsibility to shelter OFWs,” said the Unifil statement.

“Especially during the pandemic, there are at least a hundred migrant domestic workers seeking shelter every month in Hong Kong.”

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Thousands line up as HK launches much-awaited antivirus shot

Posted on 26 February 2021 No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao

One of the main vaccination centers is the Central Library in Causeway Bay

Thousands of people lined up for the first day of the free mass inoculation against coronavirus at five vaccination centers and 18 general out-patient clinics  across Hong Kong today, Feb 26, using China-made Sinovac doses for a start.

Tomorrow, the vaccine from German company BioNTech is expected to arrive after a delay of two days, and government officials said it would be made available immediately to the public as well.

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Today’s public rollout was said to have gone smoothly despite fears by some people, including migrant domestic workers, about the efficacy and possible side-effects of the Sinovac vaccine.

According to a statement from the government, the response to the free jabs had been so enthusiastic that all 70,000 slots for the first two weeks were taken up on the first day of online appointment booking.

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To cope with demand, online booking through the designated website (www.covidvaccine.gov.hk) will be opened again starting at 9am on Monday, Mar. 1.

Civil Service Secretary Patrick Nip said another 200,000 slots would be made available for booking starting on this day.

Health Secretary Sophia Chan talks with one of the early birds in Central Library

Within the first month, a few hundred thousand people from priority groups – those aged 60 and above, medical and other frontliners, and residents and staff in care homes – would have received their first shots of the vaccine. Each of these qualified residents is allowed to have a maximum of two caregivers signing up for the jabs with them.

A second dose (on the 28th day after the first shot for Sinovac) is required for the vaccine to reach its full efficacy.

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As tens of thousands of Hongkongers rushed to be among the first to get the vaccine, Filipino domestic helpers remain divided between those who are confident of the shot, and those who fear the unknown.

Comments to a report on The SUN Hong Kong about the FDHs’ views on the inoculation shows that among a sampling of 110 readers, 53 said they will go for the vaccine, 44 said they won’t and 13 were undecided.

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Those who favored the jabs said they were aware of the possible side-effects but added that the vaccine would boost their defenses against the virus.

Some of those who replied “no” cited reports of patients contracting Covid-19 after vaccination, while others said they won’t go for the shot because their employers won’t.

A few simply refused to go, saying they would just wear masks than “risk their lives.”      

Sinovac jabs will be distributed early next week to more than 1,000 private doctors who are taking part in the program.

The jabs are not required for anyone, even for those who do frontline work, but recent surveys showed that all but a small percentage of medical workers are keen to get vaccinated.

Most are said to favor Sinovac, which was today made available to three centers previously designated for the BioNTech vaccine – in Tseung Kwan O. Kwai Tsing and Tuen Mun.

Meanwhile, lawmakers approved today a $1 billion fund for indemnifying recipients of the vaccine who would have serious health complications or die from the injections.

The highest payout will be $3 million. Individuals under 40 who suffer serious side-effects will get $2.5 million, while those over 40 will receive $2 million.

Secretary for Food and Health Sophia Chan said setting up the fund does not imply the Covid jabs are unsafe to use. It just means that the authorities are preparing for the worst if there is any complication.

She said she expects the $1 billion fund will not be fully used.

Chan added that the authorities had not received any unusual reports from the more than 500 people who queued up for the Sinovac vaccine on Monday. They included Chief Executive Carrie Lam and her key officials, as well as members of the Executive and Legislative Councils.

HK's first Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa takes the jab

Today, those who took the jab at the Central Library in Causeway Bay included two former chief executives, Tung Chee-hwa and Leung Chun-ying, and former justice secretary Elsie Leung.

The Department of Health said tonight it is closely monitoring potential adverse events after the vaccinations by putting in place a mechanism to watch out for any adverse side-effects to the recipients.

The DH has established a pharmacovigilance system to receive and assess reports of adverse events submitted by healthcare professionals and the pharmaceutical industry and conduct causality assessments to find out whether the side-effects due to the vaccines. 

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