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OFWs BATTLE TO SAVE OWN LIVESMIGRANTS YEARENDER OFWs Battle to Save their Own Lives (Conclusion) OFWs in countries which are not at war do not have to dodge bullets or run away from bombs. But they had to dodge the blows and escape abuse, beatings and rape by their employers. Adding insult to injury are the stories of neglect, insensitivity, and abandonment they experience from the government which hails them as “modern-day heroes” and milks them of every dollar they earn. BY AUBREY SC MAKILAN Grace, a domestic helper in Qatar, was bleeding after her employer allegedly raped her. She went to the Philippine embassy to seek help. But to her dismay, the party being held at that time seemed to be more important to embassy officials than her situation. Irregularities Grace is a psychology graduate who wanted to work in Oman to care for his father who suffered from his second stroke. She immediately called Jinhel International Recruitment Agency after reading its advertisement for job placements in Middle East countries. She was offered a job in Qatar. Since Qatar is not too far from Oman, she immediately accepted She agreed to the offer of the recruitment agency that she work as domestic worker, taking care of a five-year old child, for a monthly salary of QR700. She also agreed to giver her salary for the first two months to the agency as commission. However, she was not given a written and signed copy of their verbal agreement. At the airport on the day of their departure last June 7, Grace and her two companions were asked to present their certificate of attendance to the Pre-Departure Orientation Seminar (PDOS), which they did not undergo. They were however assisted by a man who told the nspector, “Arbor yan, amin na ‘yang tatlong ‘yan.” (Just let them proceed. The three are ours.) They were asked instead to pay P1, 500 each ($30 at an exchange rate of $1=P50) and was not issued a receipt. They were brought to a different area to line up. Upon her arrival in Qatar on June 8, she met her employer, Dr. Abdul Aziz Al Jumiah. She was asked to sign a contract with terms different from what she agreed to with the recruitment agency. The contract stipulated that she would assume all work in the household and be paid a monthly salary of QR600. She also had no day off. Abuse Left with no option in a foreign land, she accepted the work. She worked from 5 a.m. to 2 a.m. of the next day. She also said that the pregnant wife of Abdul Aziz maltreated her. There When she related her experiences to a certain Jack who works at the Philippine embassy, she was told, “Hindi pa naman grabe ‘yang nangyayari sa’yo. Tapusin mo na ‘yang two years mo.” (What you are experiencing is not that bad. Just finish your two-year contract.) She called the office of the OWWA in Qatar and a certain Sam told her, “Tumakas ka na kung ayaw mo na. Lumabas ka at sumakay sa taxi.” (Just escape if you can’t take it anymore. Go out of the house and take a taxi.) When she pleaded to be fetched, Sam replied that the OWWA does not do rescue operations. Eventually, she talked with Abdul Aziz about her contract. In response, he brought her to Al After being brought back to her employer, the wife of Abdul Aziz told Grace to accompany her to Syria. In Syria, she said, she was borrowed by her madam’s three siblings to clean their houses and do chores from July 10 to Sept. 10. To make matters worse, she was not paid her salary ever since she started working. When they returned to Qatar, Grace said, her male employer started sexually harassing her. She When her woman employer was confined in the hospital to give birth, Grace said, Abdul Aziz raped her. She said Abdul Aziz, who came home from the hospital entered her room at around 4 a.m. of Nov. 3. She had just finished putting on her uniform after taking a bath when her employer Neglect Grace decided to run away but she was locked inside the house. Although hurting and bleeding, A Filipino taxi driver drove her to the Philippine embassy. But they were told to go to They reached the OWWA at 7 p.m. while a ballroom dancing party was going on. They waited for two hours before a representative from the embassy arrived to talk with her. Grace was led to the shelter where she met other women OFWs who were raped and maltreated. At the shelter, Grace said, she did not receive counseling and therapy sessions. She said she was not even brought to the hospital for check up. To her surprise, a certain Ferida of OWWA negotiated for her employer. She said she was She was made to sign a waiver, where she wrote, “I will not file charges against my employer for the rape case, although it happened.” But on Nov. 6, a certain Levi of the embassy gave her only the plane ticket, without her salary and belongings. When she insisted on her things, she was told, “Mamili ka, uuwi ka or madedeport ka? Basta kailangan ko ng sagot mo hanggang 3:00 dahil alis tayo ng 3:30.” (Choose, do you want to go home or be deported? I need your answer by 3:00 because we are supposed to leave by 3:30.) Grace arrived in the Philippines on Nov. 7 penniless. No one from the OWWA or the Department Rape cases Back home, Grace sought the help of Gabriela Women’s Party and Migrante to pursue her case. In a dialogue on Nov. 30, Foreign Affairs Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs But Grace is determined to file charges against her employer for allegedly raping her. Meanwhile, Grace met Mercy, another OFW in Qatar who was raped. Mercy who was allegedly raped Mercy said she also met two other women OFWs in Qatar who were raped. But they did not pursue OFWs in distress Connie Bragas-Regalado, said that migrant workers in war-torn countries are not the only ones who needed to be rescued. She said that every year, the DFA has a P100 million ($2,032,726 at an exchange rate of The migrant leader blamed the government for its failure to immediately repatriate distressed Shelters like in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are overcrowded, she said. Bragas-Regalado said that the shelter in Riyadh, which can accommodate only about 60 people houses up to 300 at times. In Kuwait, she said, the shelter had to accommodate up to 500 people. The kind of response of the government, she said, shows its disregard for its commitment under In fact, she said, Migrante has been receiving letters from a lot of stranded OFWs in the Middle East asking for their help. Migrante also related the case of Marilou Ranario who was convicted and sentenced to death by Criminalizing OFWs Bragas-Regalado also denounced the government’s tactic of “criminalizing” OFWs who run away from their employers because of non-payment of salary, abuse, harassment or contract substitution. Embassy officials resort to this, she said, so that the host country would shoulder the costs of repatriation. She said that Philippine officials would even make the OFW pay to find someone to facilitate The OFW who was advised to use another name would even be made to sign a waiver freeing the Filipinos in the U.S. Filipinos in the U.S. who are currently the biggest source of remittances are not without problems. The plight of overseas Filipinos in the United States hangs in the balance with the recent Berna Ellorin of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance or Bayan-USA) said that “Business” Various migrant groups are monitoring and protesting irregularities in the allocation of funds from and for OFWs. They protested against the plan to use P1 billion ($20,327,269) of OWWA funds to convert the Worse, Bragas-Regalado believes that this project would only be another “PhilHealth scam.” The Migrant groups are also against the policy requiring OFWs to be members of and make “It is twisted and hypocritical for the Arroyo government to claim that it is concerned about “Everything is a business,” said Bragas-Regalado, “Humahakot na lang ng pera ang gobyerno mula sa amin,” (The government is just collecting money and profiting from us.) She cited the continuous collection of the $25 OWWA membership fee in spite of the inadequate services. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat Alipato Media Center and shared by A1.Moonglow@shaw.ca via OFW Brunei login to post comments | 789 reads
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