Sunday, December 30, 2012

Thank the labourer says Shaikh Mohammad

Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum
  • Image Credit: WAM
  • His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai.


Don't celebrate my accession, thank the labourer, says Shaikh Mohammad.....

Dubai Ruler wants celebration for the common worker on anniversary of his accession.


Dubai: His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, has directed that celebrations on the anniversary of his ascendancy shall be directed to employees of basic services such as gardeners, hygiene labourers, construction labourers, public transport vehicle drivers, house servants, and others, through the "Thanks to you" campaign.
On his Twitter account, Shaikh Mohammad said on Sunday that he has directed the concerned authorities not to allocate any festivities for the January 4th ascendance day. He added that there are other community categories that need our care and thanks.
This year, said Shaikh Mohammad, we will celebrate the category  of basic services employees such as gardeners, hygiene labourers, construction labourers, public transport vehicle drivers, house servants, and other related jobs.
“Those categories play a vital role in our community, and some of them have spent long years in delivering their services with loyalty. They deserve to be thanked by us for their efforts, and we want to thank them and celebrate them this year; We want them to know that their services are well thanked and regarded and that they are contributing to making life in the UAE easier, better, and more beautiful,” Shaikh Mohammad said.
Shaikh Mohammad added that thanking these categories and being kind to them does not only reflect the face of a caring community but also conveys the values of Islam, and civilised principals that call upon us all to thank whomever extends their services to us. 
He also called upon everyone through his Twitter account to offer symbolic gifts to these categories or to publish something about them and their efforts and services on blogs or through the media, as the goal of this practice is to show goodness and gratitude in our community.
Shaikh Mohammad added that a small gift to those working as house help or working in parks and gardens will tell them they are appreciated. 

Justice indeed.....Emirati students gets 10 years for raping Pinay friend in UAE

December 28, 2012 5:20pm
A United Arab Emirates (UAE) student was sentenced to 10 years in jail after a court found him guilty of raping his Filipina friend when she tried to comfort him.

According to a report on the news site Gulf News, the Dubai Court of First Instance convicted the student of having sex with the 38-year-old Filipina against her will after she welcomed him into her kitchen.

However, the Emirati student insisted that the charges against him were groundless, saying he just went to collect rent from her.

The Emirati said he rented the flat to her and other Filipinas, adding that his friend borrowed Dh3,000 from him and that he only went there to collect his money.

The prosecutors said the Emirati student was sharing his woes with the Filipina after breaking up with his girlfriend. He allegedly asked the Filipina to hug him but she refused.

The Filipina said the Emirati was outraged when she resisted hugging him.

For her part, the Filipina testified she agreed to listen to the Emirati.

“He raped me despite the fact that I cried and begged him not to," the Filipina said iin the report.

The victim’s roommates reportedly heard her crying for hours in the washroom and convinced her to report the incident to the police, who then arrested the student. - VVP, GMA News

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Migrants' Story: The Usherette

The night skyline of Taipei, Taiwan. Courtesy of Taiwan Tourism Office
Different shapes of plastic containers, some square, mostly rectangle and oval, containing varied Filipino delicacies were lying on top of the concrete table. There were the usual Filipino favorites like pancit bihon, chicken-pork adobo, menudo, lumpiang shanghai, laing, escabecheng tilapia that looked so orange with banana catsup, and the buko salad with lots of green shredded jelly. There were also canned soft drinks and rice cake called biko. It was especially ordered by Esper from Aling Magda of Won-Won a few months back.
Soon, the guests started to arrive one by one on that mid-morning spring. They all gathered in a park, surrounded by very green ornamental plants.

Flora, Esper’s closest friend, went to this park soon after attending the earliest morning mass at a nearby church to make sure they were able to reserve the place for the birthday party.
They occupied the bench positioned next to one of the few tables provided by city park administrators. The tables and chairs made of cement were probably meant for a family or for a group of friends who might like to spend time in the park in order to bond, like Esper’s group.
There was also Merced who came along with Flora on that still cold April day, with the sun shining over them, as they carefully arranged the food on the table.

Anticipating a sunny day, they had chosen the area close to the trees to have adequate shade for the birthday bash of Esper who had just turned 40. Her birthday actually happened five days ago, but as is the case of most overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) around the world, Esper could not usually go out on weekdays for a day off. She had to wait for Sunday in order to celebrate her birthday with friends in Taipei.

“It is always good to have a lot of friends in a place where you do not know anyone,” she once told me. “Sometimes, they truly become one’s family in a foreign land. Besides we know more or less the kind of work that each of us do and we also learn a lot from each other,” she declared.
Earlier, Esper, who likewise attended the first mass at the St. Christopher’s church, the most famous church among Filipinos in Taipei, had to pick up some of the food she ordered for her birthday. She was smiling at every friend who came to greet her. Probably influenced by the Chinese tradition, she was dressed in red and looked so unusually radiant. Esper looked so much different that day. She did not want to think of her work but only of her belated birthday celebration in the park.
She was very excited. “Happy birthday, Esper!” greeted everyone who arrived for the bash. “You look so gorgeous today! I love your dress,” some guests greeted her.

Merced was just so happy to take pictures of every friend who came to greet Esper. Most of them had just come from the church, too. There was a lot of laughter, as if the park was exclusively reserved for their affair. The bench was not enough for the 14 OFWs who were mostly standing around their banquet table. There was a lot of food for the whole barkada and Tonia was quick in suggesting to have early dinner at the park, too.

They wanted to spend the whole day at the park if not for the unexpected rain. Besides, Esper promised to return to the church to serve as an usherette. “That’s a blessing!” remarked Tonia, referring to the rain. She was the most boisterous among her friends. She was the one who insisted last week that I join them at the park after my 10:30 in the morning mass. It was Tonia who recounted to me how they had planned the party to make Esper happy at least for that Sunday.

Esper was one of those parishioners who had become very close to me as she served as usherette in the church almost the whole day every Sunday. For a change, she asked me if I could allow her to skip her commitment that Sunday in greeting and ushering church goers as part of her job as a member of the hospitality ministry at the parish, but she also promised to assist at the last mass in the evening.

It looked like her friends were successful in making Esper happy that Sunday. After all, she is one person who was easy to please. She seemed very honest too with her true sentiments especially when she had a problem. She was very emotional. She laughs without control, and she cries when needed. I witnessed those moments several times at the prayer meeting of the charismatic group, where she was also a member.

When I arrived at the park, the laughter had ceased momentarily because I told them that I need to go back to the church for my next mass or probably they did not expect me to take time to greet them. Immediately, I invited her friends to pray with me for Esper, who started to appear teary eyed. My prayer was followed by saying the grace after which I invited everyone to attack the food lying on the small concrete table. That was my way of making them feel at ease with my presence. The laughter continued and the picture taking, too.

I noticed there were Taiwanese in the nearby tables observing us while others were just busy doing their own business in the park. Not far away were other groups of Filipinos congregating in the park. Some were dancing, apparently rehearsing for a number, while others were simply having fun at the park. Just like the group of Esper, other OFW groups in that park had probably experienced brief liberation from a whole week of hard work.

In between the picture taking, Esper wanted me to take a bite, but I told her to share with me only the biko. She immediately cut a slice of biko but I refused to bring it along and insisted that she only send me some should there be left over. As their pastor, it was part of my responsibility to share their joy even by merely visiting them in the park on Sunday.

Esper was so contented to see me visiting her with her friends. Beaming with pride, she started to introduce me to the rest of the group whose names I could not all remember, except for Tonia and Flora who were also active volunteers at the various ministries in the parish. Happiness was painted all over Esper as she least expected me to spare time for her birthday celebration at the park.

Esper is one OFW that I could never forget among the many parishioners who had actively volunteered in the parish. If one has to make a movie, her story would be a mine for dramatic highlights.

One Sunday, on a winter morning, I saw her seated at the lobby of the St. Christopher’s Church wearing sunglasses which seemed rather strange. She never wore sunglasses inside the church. She immediately stood up to approach me and asked if I have time to listen to her.

It was customary for me to walk around the parish in between my Sunday masses and meetings to check or monitor the surroundings of the church. I even made it a habit to check on the toilets if they were clean and not smelly. To me, it is not just the church which should be clean, but also its facilities. Such habit of checking the toilet was part of keeping the church service upgraded. I would instantly ask the janitress to clean the toilet if they had become messy.

It was in fact through one of those regular checks that I discovered and was able to confirm that some OFWs were taking illegal drugs. I accidentally saw a lighter, an aluminum foil and a straw left behind lying on the small window in one of the toilets. These items are used in taking shabu. Shabu is methamphetamine hydrochloride and is common among Filipino illicit drug users.

When I shared that discovery with the parishioners, several OFWs came to confirm that they knew many OFWs who were actually users of the prohibited drug. Drug addicts had probably used the church in their drug transactions, as they could remain anonymous there because on Sundays, the place becomes inundated by churchgoers.

Once inside the toilet cubicle, nobody would know what one was doing in private, including taking prohibited drugs. One very young parishioner who claimed to be a former drug user told me that by merely looking at the eyes of our parishioners, he could immediately identify who among them is a drug user. He disclosed further that some of the OFWs working in the factories were encouraged to take the illegal drugs in order to stay awake when company owners request them to do overtime jobs. The poor OFWs were obliged to render at times up to eight or twelve hours of overtime work when production demands became high. Such overtime job exposes them highly to accidents. I have met some OFWs who came to our parish who had lost limbs, hand, and fingers. The accidents, according to them, happened because they were too tired in their jobs and had failed to secure themselves from the dangerous machine that they were operating.

It was in the ladies’ toilet that I uncovered another shocking story in the parish while working there as parish priest. In one usual round that I took one humid summer afternoon, I noticed the toilet bowl covered but soiled with fresh blood. The smell of the blood was strongly fetid and immediately I started to think that the last lady to use it was rather very untidy and had no respect for others who would be using the toilet next.

With my right foot, I slowly opened the bowl and checked the extent of the blood spill that was inside before flushing it but I was surprised that it was rather clean. I then traced the source of the blood and discovered a lacerated fetus lying among the napkins and toilet papers inside the trash bin. I shivered upon such discovery. Even our parish was never spared by someone who had aborted a baby. One parishioner commented that the person who did it was a criminal.

Such discovery confirmed the reports alleged by Filipino-Chinese doctors working in hospitals that many OFWs were submitting themselves to abortion. Of course, forced by their employers in exchange of keeping their jobs, abortion was common among women OFWs. That was enough reason to lobby the Taiwanese government legislators not to use pregnancy as a reason for job termination to which they obliged.

But let me go back to Esper’s interesting story. Besides working for several years in Taipei, she had also disclosed several funny stories about her love life. There was Efren to whom she was introduced through text by a common friend in Manila. They became text mates. Efren, according to Esper, courted her via long distance. He was from Baguio but worked in Manila as a factory worker. Younger than she, he was in his mid-thirties but has never been married.

Esper claimed that Efren accepted her, knowing that she is a widow with three children. Her husband died early. She told me that it was better that way. He left her only with three children otherwise it might have been more difficult to send them to college if they had more than three children.
It was Esper who would call Efren, because it was a lot cheaper to call to Manila from Taiwan. According to Esper, she fell in love with Efren’s thoughtfulness because he was sending her text messages almost every week without missing a single Sunday. That love changed when Esper finally met him in person.

In one of her vacations in the Philippines, Esper finally met Efren to verify if indeed he was the Efren she had come to know through long distance calls and a picture he sent her. She revealed that they checked in at one of the motels in Pasay. I was dumbfounded by such disclosure at first, but pretended not to be in order to listen to her usual vivid narration. She said that she was so disappointed by Efren’s incapacity to have an erection for the longest time when they stayed at the motel in Pasay.
After that encounter she never contacted him again after she had returned to Taipei. She changed her mobile phone number and declared their love affair closed. That way, she said, “I am telling him that I am no longer interested.” I told her that she was only interested in sex, and we both started to laugh. When I told her that what she did was wrong, she justified herself by saying that she only wanted to be happy the second time around.

Some of her friends in the church ministry of hospitality tell us that whenever they saw us talking in private, Esper must be having a problem again. We just smile at such remarks. Esper’s stories were in fact full of moral lessons.

Esper is petite in height and I sometimes wonder how she could attract men as she looked a bit corpulent and dark. Her parents were from Negros Occidental. According to her, they migrated to General Santos and it was there where she was born and grew up. They are very poor people, she claimed, and was very grateful to have left the country and found job in Taipei where she earned quite good. She had been in Taipei for six years and had been relatively lucky to have employers who were not abusive, except for the current one.

She recounted to me the sexual attempts made by her current male employer when she was once alone in the house one summer afternoon. Mr. Chen, her male employer, had stolen a kiss from her when he was once drunk. She let it pass as she claimed he was drunk. But when he got drunk again, he attempted to embrace her and Esper pushed him hard. Jokingly, Esper told me that she could have been happy to submit to his attempts if not for his mouth which smelled so bad.
“I could not take his very bad breath, Father,” Esper had smilingly divulged in one of those small talks we had outside the church. “He’s not that old, but his mouth is reddish and he smokes a lot, too,” she added.

Like some Taiwanese men, Mr. Chen chewed betel nut. Luckily, he was very drunk that time when Esper pushed him hard. He lost his balance and that gave Esper enough time to quickly run inside her room and lock herself in. He followed her, but she did not open the door.nI told her to be careful or probably find a way to report the incident to her broker or to the police but she just shrugged it off, probably thinking that she could not trust her broker as well. She promised though to be always cautious in dealing with her male employer. She defended him however, saying that he is very sweet when not drunk.

Small stories from Esper made me become very familiar with her background. She was one OFW who can easily make friends and is also easy to deal with. My first meeting with her was when she asked me if I was an Ilonggo to which I answered no.

“I am Hiligaynon,” I told her to her amazement because I started already conversing with her using the Ilonggo language. She immediately trusted me after that first meeting and shared so many personal stories of her life. Moreover, she also reported to me anything untoward happening at the lobby, inside or around the church before she reported them to her coordinator. She was a very reliable parish volunteer.

Based on the many meetings I had with her, it was a different Esper who approached me that one winter morning. I noticed that her eyes were swollen especially when she took off her sunglasses. It was strange to see her wearing sunglasses inside the church, especially at the lobby. But she was always funny or she must really have a problem, I thought.

“How much time do you need for this story?” I asked Esper. She replied, “Maybe longer than usual. I have a very big problem Father,” she started. “My son has been accused of rape,” she added. “He just recently turned fourteen. We had just celebrated his birthday when I was on vacation with them,” she continued to justify. “The woman who accused him of rape is already 19 years old,” she said looking at me straight in the eye. “She’s older and the family is now suing us.”

“How could that be, he is only a child?” I protested. He also has rights. He needed to be assisted by the police or by the Department of Social Welfare and Development. Esper was crying even more as she continued to narrate the news she received from her father. I could see her frustration and confusion. She said she wanted to go home to General Santos, but she had just arrived from her holidays. She is at a loss. She is so worried that her son might be imprisoned. She likewise had confused me with such news when I knew that she has just come back from her vacation with her family and could have sensed some problems while she was with them. We retreated away from the church lobby so as not to attract the attention of the parishioners who were entering the church.

Being relatively familiar with her, I made an effort to ask more questions as I could not easily understand the situation even if I have in the past heard so many tragic stories about her family.
Apparently, Esper’s monthly remittance has always been a source of trouble for her family. She once made her father the designated recipient of her salary through the bank but that arrangement was withdrawn after a year when her children started to complain that they were not given their allowances as earlier agreed. She discovered that the remittance was instead shared by his father with her other siblings in need of help.

They kept borrowing money from her father who could not say no to them. She complained that her children who were attending Catholic schools were denied support by her father. She was very mad when she learned that all the remittances she sent were enjoyed mostly by her other siblings and little was practically left for her very own children. Her siblings got mad at her when she changed the beneficiary of her remittance.

With the help of a very caring cousin, she was able to save some money to buy a tricycle which had served as her children’s service vehicle to and from school when not used as a public utility transport.
“That seemed very positive,” I told Esper with admiration. “Not at all, Father,” she protested. “My two daughters were raped by our tricycle driver one after the other,” she bemoaned.
“It was done inside the tricycle!”

This story had taken me aback. “What can I do? I am so far away and I trusted people whom I thought could help us,” she said. “The person who did those horrendous acts is a relative,” she confessed. I had high regard for Esper because of her tough disposition after recounting to me that story last summer. In fact, she has always been a subject of my little moments with the Lord.
For a long while, I had kept her in my prayer, especially her two daughters, that they too will be safe. As to her son, she feared that he will be put to jail once convicted. Such dreadful thought was driving her crazy. Her high school classmate who is a lawyer promised to help her but that was not enough considering that she lived far away from his son. Esper’s life is like a telenovela; it could stun anyone but also bring laughter at times. Despite her sufferings, she could still make me laugh.
“That is probably how most Filipinos deal with their problems,” I concluded. “Maybe, Esper wanted simply to be heard. Maybe she just needed someone to listen to her problems.” “Was he really capable of raping a girl who is a lot older than him?” was my insistent question. “Is your son that big to overthrow a girl who might have protested to such sexual attempt?”

From her wallet Esper took out a picture of her with her children and pointed to me her son who looked so frail and innocent. I wondered when that picture was taken, but most likely it was taken just recently because it looked new. Esper wanted to go home to be with her son but she knew it was impossible unless she cuts short her working contract. In that case, she will go home not only penniless, but with lots of debts.

In between sobs she said, “I thought that by working overseas, I could really provide a good life to my children. Evidently, I was not able to.”

At that moment, I had to excuse myself from our unexpectedly very long conversation. I had to prepare for my next mass and she knew that my time was limited during Sundays. I left her with the promise to talk to her again. She rejoined her friends at the lobby. I knew that they would console her and probably extend the usual support.

While celebrating my next mass that particular Sunday, I had Esper in my thoughts. I also thought of her family. I imagined the pain she carried in her heart when that year before she discovered that her two daughters were raped by their tricycle driver. Thank God, they did not become pregnant. Who was looking after them now, guarding them from possible abuse? In less than a year, her son stood accused of raping a girl. Was she telling me the truth? How could she bear the gross pain as a mother?
Earlier, she had approached me for advice. Would it help if she catches the first flight to Manila the next day and proceed to General Santos to be with her son? Why doesn’t she just go home and be with her son? If she goes home, will the case be resolved? Will her problem be gone?

That afternoon I was more equipped to talk to her again. I went to look for her at the lobby, but she was not there. I proceeded to the third floor of the parish multi-purpose building where she normally attends the prayer meeting with the charismatic community, but I was told that she skipped that session. I checked her presence at the second floor among the other groups who were having meetings but she was nowhere to be found.

Moving around the parish, I saw her inside the church. She looked as calm as the place. There were few people inside the church who were either kneeling in front of the Blessed Sacrament at the right side of the church or lighting candles at the altar of Our Lady of Perpetual Help located at the right. She was at the main altar, seated in front of the risen image of Jesus Christ hanged on the cross. I walked by in front of the main altar trying to seek her attention, attempting to disturb her and hoping that she would approach me. I was hesitant to break her communion with God. She did not look at me. Her eyes were only fixed at the wooden image of the risen Christ. Her gaze at Jesus was steady, persistent and not even blinking. I presume she had seen me walking by the altar, but she did not bother to ask for a meeting again. She might have found her salvation.

Fr. Edwin Corros, CS
Editors Note: The story is from the book “Migrants’ Stories, Migrants’ Voices 4″ published by the Philippine Migrants Rights Watch (PMRW) with the support from CEI (Conferenza Episcopale Italiana) or the Italian Bishops’ Conference. The book contains a collection of 10 stories of the realities of migration as faced by Filipinos abroad and their family members in the Philippines. abs-cbnNEWS.com obtained permission from PMRW to publish the stories online.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

A Story of Hope, Courage and Persevarance...

From a Manila slum emerges an unlikely ballerina...

"We have to give people hope that there is another way, a better way, forward....."

 

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The ghetto called Aroma reeks of putrefying trash collected by its residents for recycling. Half-naked children with grimy faces play on muddy dirt roads lined by crumbling shanties of tarpaulin walls, cracked tin roofs and communal toilets. 
From this Manila slum of garbage collectors emerged an unlikely Cinderella: ballerina Jessa Balote who at the age of 10 was plucked out of her grubby life by a ballet school to prepare her for a life on stage.

In four years since her audition in 2008, Jessa has performed in various productions, including Swan Lake, Pinocchio, Don Quixote and a local version of Cinderella. She rode a plane for the first time in August to compete in the 2012 Asian Grand Prix ballet competition for students and young dancers in Hong Kong, where she was a finalist.

The 14-year-old Jessa's unlikely success is as much a celebration of a unique effort by the Philippines' most famous prima ballerina, Lisa Macuja, to help slum kids of Manila by providing them a scholarship and classical ballet training for six to seven years.  

More than a quarter of the Southeast Asian nation's 94 million people live in abject poverty, many in sprawling and unsanitary shanty towns like Aroma in the capital city. Despite a reecent economic upturn, there are not enough full-time jobs. Education skills are lacking and incomes are low. At least 3,000 Filipinos leave their families behind every day to seek employment abroad.
Jessa, who would have likely followed her family to a life of garbage picking, had not much of a future to look forward to.

"I used to tag along with my father and mother when they collected garbage in the evening," Jessa said in her home about the size of a shipping container with a small attic.
Her family would gather trash from houses in the nearby Quiapo district or rummage for scrap metal in the huge garbage dump not far from home.

That was until her successful audition for the Project Ballet Futures dance scholarship established by Macuja, founder and artistic director of Ballet Manila who is married to business tycoon Fred Elizalde.

The outreach program of Ballet Manila — which runs a dance company and a school by the same name — initially accepted 40 students from Jessa's charity-run school in Manila's Tondo district dump site. Some dropped out, but new batches have been accepted.  
Today, the program has 55 scholars, aged 9 to 18, from five partner public schools such as Jessa's. They train daily after school along with 60 paying students. 

"I can help my parents more with what I do now. I earn money from ballet," said Jessa, sitting on a plastic bench in her shorts and t-shirt, her long hair loose. The slim teenager, perhaps so used to dancing on her toes, would often have her toes pointed at the wooden floor even while sitting during the interview. 

Behind her, the plywood wall of the family shack was adorned with pictures of her in gossamer tutu on stage. Sharing the space were frames of ballet certificates and a newspaper clipping about the garbage picker-turned-ballerina. A pair of satin pointe shoes lay on top of a gym bag, a few meters (yards) from sacks of used plastic bottles and other garbage piled up outside the door of her cramped home.  Jessa and other kids are trained in the rigorous Russian Vaganova ballet and are required to keep up with their academics in school. They are provided a monthly stipend of 1,200 pesos to 3,000 pesos ($30 to $73) depending on their ballet level, as well as meals, milk and ballet outfits. They also receive fees of 400 pesos to 1,500 pesos ($10 to $37) for each performance. 

Pointe shoes alone cost $50 to $80 a pair — a fortune for someone eking a living on $2 a day — and wear out within weeks or days, said Macuja.
The daughter of a former senior trade official, Macuja was 18 years old when she received a two-year scholarship at the Vaganova Choreographic Institute (now the Academy of Russian Ballet) in Saint Petersburg in 1982, where she graduated with honors.

She was the first foreign principal ballerina for the Kirov Ballet in St. Petersburg before returning to the Philippines, where she worked as artist-in-residence at the Cultural Center of the Philippines and a principal dancer at the Philippine Ballet Theatre.

Macuja, 48, founded Ballet Manila in 1994 with the aim of making the high art of classical ballet more accessible to common people. The dance company has held performances in malls, schools, town halls and remote villages of the archipelago. She set up the scholarship program in 2008 as a way of paying back for her good fortunes.

For Jessa and the other slum children, it opened a whole new world. Literally so, when she flew to Hong Kong for the ballet competition.

Her glee while on a roller coaster in Disneyland was captured in a photo in her humble home.
During the competition in Hong Kong, she said she often felt nervous and shy to be dancing among well-off peers. But she overcame her fear, remembering Macuja's advice "to persist despite the odds and to not let poverty hinder me."

As a company apprentice she makes around 7,000 pesos ($170) a month, sometimes more, from stipend and performance fees. The money is not enough to lift her family from poverty, but ballet has given her a choice in life.

Her father, Gorgonio, works part-time as a construction worker besides collecting garbage. His meager pay is insufficient to feed his large family of six children and two grandchildren. One son works in a factory while another daughter collects garbage.

Jessa's childhood dream is to become a school teacher. But she also wants to dance as a professional ballerina. She says she is challenged by the feisty acting and difficult dance turns of the Black Swan character in Swan Lake and aspires for that role.

For Jamil Montebon, another Project Ballet's beneficiary, the scholarship was a life saver.
The troubled 18-year-old has left his broken family in a violent slum community not far from Aroma.

He became a ballet scholar at 13 but then dropped out of high school and ballet last year after a fight with his mother. During his time off from ballet and school, he collected garbage and worked in a junk shop. At night he would go drinking with other kids who often clashed with rival gangs, then sleep in a church where he got one free meal a week.

He was later accepted back into the program, which demands that children keep good grades and stay out of trouble. After shaping up, he moved into Ballet Manila's dormitory.

"I think that the key really is that these kids have been given hope, and that hope will transform their lives," Macuja said.
 

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Pinoy teachers in US win $4.5 million in damages

December 20, 2012 5:30pm
 
A group of Filipino teachers was awarded $4.5 million in damages from a class suit filed against their recruiter — Los Angeles-based Universal Placement Inc. (UPI) and its owner, Lourdes Navarro, on Monday.

The jury cited UPI's violation of the California Employment Agency, Employment Counseling and Job Listing Act for violation of Unfair Business Practices and misrepresentation under the California Business and Professional Code.

The case, spearheaded by the Filipino Educators Federation in Lousiana (FEFL), was filed in 2010. FEFL represents over 300 teachers.

“Migrant workers' rights should be respected, defended, and promoted as fervently as any human right,” FEFL said.

The decision proved that UPI violated laws from the Philippines, Louisiana, and California with each teacher paying up to $16,000 to be deployed in the US.

These teachers were recruited from 2007 to 2009 under the H1B visa program and were deployed to various school districts in Louisiana to teach subjects such as math, science and special education.

Modus operandi

UPI's scam reportedly begins with a selection process in the Philippines where each applicant was required to pay $5,000 which supposedly covered all costs.

However, the recruiter will ask for additional fees and payments after the applicant pays the initial amount.

Since most of the applicants are either deep in debt or have sold their properties to pay the initial amount, all they can do is to give in to the additional fees being asked by UPI since they won't refund the $5,000.

The recruiters also pressured the applicants by threatening them that they will give their slots to another applicant if they did not pay the additional fees immediately. - VVP, GMA News

Thursday, December 20, 2012

6 Pinays' held against their will in Malaysia

Posted at 12/03/2012 4:17 PM | Updated as of 12/04/2012 3:48 PM
KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysian authorities have freed 105 mostly Indonesian maids who were forced to work without pay by day and held against their will at night, local media reported on Monday.
The women were freed Saturday in a raid on a building near the capital Kuala Lumpur where they had been held by their employment agency, said the reports, in a case sure to feed anger among Malaysia's neighbors over recurring reports of foreign maids being abused in the country.
The 95 Indonesians, six Filipinas and four Cambodians had entered Malaysia in recent months on social visit passes that do not confer the right to work legally in the country, leaving them vulnerable to abuse, officials were quoted saying.

Authorities involved in the case could not immediately be reached.
The Star newspaper said the women were locked up in three floors of a building in the state of Selangor.
They were sent every morning to houses in the area to work as domestic helpers but were confined at night, it quoted Selangor immigration department director Amran Ahmad as saying.
The newspaper said some of the women claimed the agency took their pay as an advance payment equal to seven months' wages for the recruitment services.
Their monthly wages were 700 ringgit ($230) it said.
Twelve people were arrested over their confinement, it added.
Malaysia, which has some of Southeast Asia's highest living standards, has been a magnet for women from Indonesia, the Philippines and Cambodia who seek work as maids.

However, Indonesia imposed a ban on sending maids to Malaysia three years ago over numerous cases of women being abused by their employers or recruiters.
Indonesia, the main source of domestic workers for Malaysia, announced last December it would lift the ban after the two countries agreed to better protect maids, but new incidents have continued to rankle Jakarta.

In October, an advertisement in Malaysia that offered Indonesian maids "on sale" went viral online in Indonesia, sparking new outrage.
Last month, police said they were investigating a man in northern Malaysia for allegedly raping his 15-year-old Indonesian maid, while in a separate case, three police officers were charged in November with raping a 25-year-old Indonesian woman at a police station.

Pinays, other Asian maids in Jordan tell of abuse, misery

AMMAN – Norhima Hayral from the Philippines sought refuge in a shelter for abused Asian housemaids in Jordan to escape from employers she says both beat and raped her.
“The recruitment agency took my passport the second I arrived in Amman’s airport” six months ago, 27-year-old Hayral told AFP at the shelter funded by Manila’s Overseas Labour Office.
In October, the Philippines lifted a ban imposed in 2007 on its citizens working in Jordan after the two countries signed deals to protect them, including guaranteeing a minimum monthly salary of $400.

The ban had been imposed because of “the growing number of distressed Filipino workers” seeking help from Philippine diplomatic offices in Jordan, according to Manila.
But despite the accords, abuse is still reported.
Hayral worked for an eight-member Jordanian family, “but the wife used to beat me all the time. I think she was jealous because I was much younger.”
She said she could not handle the abuse and within three months began working secretly for others.
“One day I was asked to clean a house in a farm outside Amman. The owner started to touch me and when I resisted, he beat me.
“He threatened me with a knife, took me to a room and raped me,” she said, bursting into tears.
Hayral said she could not contact the police because her status was illegal.
“Officials at the shelter are trying to get back my passport. I am waiting for the Philippines government to give me money. I just want to go home.”
The Philippines ambassador in Jordan, Olivia V. Palala, told AFP that Manila wanted to protect these maids.
“We want to ensure that the maids get better treatment. We want to ensure their basic rights, as humans, are protected,” Palala said.
“Until all of this comes into place I do not think we will see more maids coming in,” she said, adding that there are already 30,000 workers from the Philippines in Jordan.
But the situation has still not improved.
“Violations continued even after the ban was lifted. You find domestic workers who are paid $150-$250 monthly and some are not paid at all,” said Mario Antonio, who is in charge of the shelter that currently houses 75 maids.

“This year, we have received at this place more than 952 cases who were seeking our help — 596 were returned to the Philippines.”
Maylene Magno, 20, who broke her leg when she fled her employers’ home, said she was severely beaten after her Iraqi employers in Amman accused her of stealing 100 Jordanian dinars ($140).
“The landlady beat me and broke my arm after accusing me of stealing the money,” Magno told AFP.
“I ran away when the family was asleep, jumping from the second floor, which broke my leg. Luckily I have my passport and now I am waiting to go home.”
Many Sri Lankan workers in Jordan, estimated to number 40,000, are also suffering.
“Around 100 domestic workers run away from their employers every month,” I.L.H. Jameel of the Sri Lankan embassy told AFP.
“One day a woman came here after she ran away from a sponsor’s house because his 16-year-old boy burned her with a hot iron. Another woman came to us in August after her sponsor severely tortured her.”

Human Rights Watch (HRW) says many of the 70,000 Asian domestic workers in Jordan face the same abuses as migrant domestic workers elsewhere in the region.
These include beatings, passports confiscated, being confined to the house, insults, withholding of pay and long hours with no days off.
“The reasons these abuses persist is the weak enforcement of existing legal rights and omissions and provisions in the law that facilitate abuse,” HRW said in a report late last year.
Jordan’s labour ministry downplayed the problem, however.
“The number of cases mentioned is small compared to the problems in other countries around us. We do not know if all these cases are actually right,” ministry secretary general Hamadah Abu Nejmeh told AFP.
“There is some negligence, but Jordan does not tolerate violations. It is very hard to inspect houses and search for violations. That is why we have a special department to receive complaints and address them.”
Amman has approved some measures to protect domestic workers and punish violators, but problems persist.
“There is no specific body to tackle abuse complaints,” said Linda Kalash of the local group Tamkeen for Legal Aid and Human Rights, citing “chaos in the entire process.
“All related laws should be reviewed and then enforced effectively.”

MUSA HATTAR – Agence France Presse

UK-based domestic workers share stories of exploitation

ODWs in the UK share life stories of migrants for International Migrants Day/Patrick Ropeta
LONDON – A group of domestic workers in England shared personal stories of exploitation and called for better labor rights to mark International Migrants Day 2012.
Members of Justice for Domestic Workers (J4DW), a support group run by domestic workers for domestic workers, gathered at Syracuse University on Sunday (December 16) to discuss labor issues and human rights.
UK-based migrants from around the world, including Philippines, India, Indonesia, Morocco, and Nigeria, told their stories of hardship as foreign workers, many of whom experienced some form of physical, mental, emotional or sexual abuse from previous employers.

Mira Suelto, 35, from Negros Oriental in the Philippines, was among the group. She claimed to have suffered poor working conditions under former employers from the United Arab Emirates, but managed to flee from the Arab family while staying in the UK.
“I managed to escape from them,” she told ABS-CBN News. “The salary was very low, I worked extremely long hours, and they were also abusive. I also didn’t have communication with my family back home, and even if I tried to write letters, my employers would keep it and won’t send them.”
Under the old UK visa for overseas domestic workers (ODW), Suelto eventually found a new employer in London, a bachelor entrepreneur whom she said treated her well. But her good luck didn’t last long.

In 2008, the Filipina domestic worker was again in trouble, but this time with British immigration officers. Due to unfortunate circumstances, she was suspected of breaking the terms of her visa when she was allegedly accused of working on her employer’s business establishment rather than his household. Migrants with ODW visas are only allowed to work as help in private households.
“I couldn’t sleep at the time. I was taken into custody and even taken to the airport a few times for deportation. I was alone and I had no one to help me for a long time. But I knew that I wasn’t doing anything illegal. I only came to this country to work and help my family,” she recalled.
Suelto’s case lasted until 2011, when she was eventually given the right to remain and work in the UK after proving her innocence in court. After years of limbo and being unable to work, she is now rebuilding her life and is being assisted by J4DW and Kalayaan, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) supporting vulnerable migrants.
“We cannot deny what is happening to migrants,” said Marissa Begonia, an activist from J4DW and a domestic worker herself for the past 18 years.
She added: “They are being abused and exploited. There should be more legislation to improve the rights and protections of migrant domestic workers.”

Modern day slavery
Begonia and J4DW are campaigning for the restoration of the ODW visa, which was revised by the UK government in April 2012.
In the new system, migrant domestic workers are no longer allowed to change employer, a key feature of the previous visa. They are also no longer allowed to renew their visa while in the UK, and are legally required to enter and leave the country at the same time as their employer.
With this new visa regulation, domestic workers who have a similar experience to Suelto will no longer have the option to stay in the UK to seek new employers and settle in the country.
“To tie domestic workers with their employers is slavery. We live in the modern world but this is modern day slavery,” Begonia argued.
In the UK, reports based on figures from 2011 suggest an estimated 1.5 million domestic workers in private and diplomatic households, many of whom are migrants from Asia and Africa.
A study by London-based charity Kalayaan claims that 41% of migrant domestic workers suffer a form of abuse from employers, based on statistics from the Home Office between 2003 and 2010.
“We are concerned that the loss [of certain rights from the ODW visa] will ultimately facilitate trafficking, including trafficking for domestic servitude,” said Kate Roberts from Kalayaan, who was also at the event.
She continued: “We will continue to support migrant domestic workers to enforce their rights, to take cases. And we’re going to continue to build up evidence as to why migrant domestic workers do need to be recognized as workers with enforceable protections in the UK.”

Net migration
The government argues that changes on the ODW visa were necessary to help manage the country’s net migration, part of wider changes to tighten UK immigration policies in light of the global economic crisis.
Earlier this year, Cabinet member Theresa May claimed that revisions on the ODW visa were designed to ensure that this route is not abused by unskilled workers wishing to enter and settle in the UK.
But campaigners supporting ODWs argue that migrant domestic workers have a negligible impact on overall migration. A report by Kalayaan claim that only 5% of ODWs settle in the UK.
More importantly, according to the Trade Union Congress, ODWs have minimal impact on local employment and services with their share of taxes exceeding the public costs of their stay in the UK.

Helping society
A report by J4DW claim that ODWs in the UK are making valuable contributions to society rather than being burdens to the state.
The small study entitled “The Contribution Migrant Domestic Workers Make to the Global Economy” outlined the positive impact of this sector to the wider society.
It stipulated that migrant domestic workers facilitate the work of their employers, who are often busy professionals and captains of industry, by assisting them in their lives which consequently allows them to achieve their economic goals.
Statistics from the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) support this claim, stipulating in a recent survey that 79% of private households with migrant domestic workers agreed that being unable to hire ODWs will affect their lives “badly”.
Furthermore, the J4DW report claimed that ODWs are helping the global economy by simultaneously injecting money into the their country of origin, through remittances that sustain their family back home, and their host country, through their local expenditures on rent, food, clothing and taxes.
“I want to reach out to everybody to recognize the valuable contribution of migrant domestic workers and all migrants,” urged Begonia.

Labor rights
Representatives from trade unions and NGOs have expressed support for J4DW and their campaign, lending advise and encouragement to the group at their celebration of International Migrants Day.
“A lot of this country was built on migrant workers’ contribution, commitment and strength,” said Diana Holland, Assistant General Secretary from UNITE, one of the largest labor unions in the UK.
She added: “There are plenty of people who maybe started their life in a different country who become citizen of another country. They’re no longer migrant workers. They are part of that country. There are plenty of British workers who have become citizens of other countries or who work in other countries. I want them to be treated the same way as I hope this country would treat other people coming in from other parts of the world.”
The International Labor Organization (ILO), an agency of the United Nations dealing with labor issues, estimates that there are 53-100 million domestic workers around the world, many of whom are women and migrants.
Yet, despite this figure, domestic workers are often excluded from labor legislation in most countries. This led to the introduction of the ILO Convention No. 189 in 2011, which ensures that domestic workers have basic rights in any given country, like minimum wage, days off, and decent working conditions.
“Migrants are also human beings just like everyone. They should be respected and given rights in any country that they come to, because they also deserve a living,” said Kwasi Agyemang-Prempeh from Justice for Cleaners UK, a sister group of J4DW.
As of December 2012, however, only Uruguay, Mauritius and the Philippines have ratified the landmark ILO convention, prompting a campaign from organizations like the International Trade Union Congress to push various governments to implement it.
Oliver Pearce from Christian Aid, who also supports J4DW, said: “Migrants are often exploited, and that can lead to poverty for them and poverty for their families back home. Countries like the UK should be playing a leading role in setting an example that basic labor rights are implemented.”
He concluded: “Migrants, wherever they’re working in the world, should be entitled to the same rights, particularly the same labor rights as other citizens and other people.”
Established in 2000 by the United Nations, International Migrants Day is observed annually on December 18, the anniversary of a UN convention adopted in 1990 to protect the rights of migrant workers and their families.

Patrick Camara Ropeta, ABS-CBN Europe News Bureau

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

270 distressed OFW's evacuated from Syria via Lebanon

Posted at 12/13/2012 9:45 AM | Updated as of 12/13/2012 9:45 AM
BEIRUT, Lebanon – A total of 270 distressed overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) from Syria arrived at the Rafik Hariri International Airport in Lebanon.
“Actually, this is the first time that our Filipinos are being evacuated from Syria via Lebanon. So this is the first one, and we’re very happy that there are a lot of them that are able to be included in this evacuation,” said Philippine Ambassador Leah Ruiz.

The Philippine embassy in Syria organized the evacuation due to the ongoing civil unrest in the country. Previously, OFWs were being evacuated directly out of Damascus.
“Amo ko mabait, kaya iniwan na ‘ko sa embassy. Pinauwi na ako. Okay lang sa kanya kasi gulong-gulo doon sa Aleppo, nagsasabugan. Nakikita-kita namin mismo sa tabi-tabi ng mga bahay naming,” said one of the distressed OFWs, Wahida Usman.
Accompanied by officials from the Philippine Embassy in Syria, the evacuees were met in Beirut by staff of Caritas Lebanon Migrants Center and the International Organization for Migration or IOM.

“Based on the request of the government of the Philippines, IOM organized a chartered flight of 270 Filipino nationals coming out of Syria, and IOM will take care usually of all the logistical arrangements, including the assistance at the border and until they leave the country from the airport. In addition, we provide assistance at transit--upon transit and arrival,” explained Othman Belbeisy, IOM Representative to Lebanon and Senior Crisis Coordinator for the Syria crisis.
The IOM also supplied food to the evacuees.

According to Belbeisy, IOM will organize evacuation efforts based on the numbers of distressed OFWs given by the Philippine embassy in Syria.

Filipina maid abused, raped by employers in Morocco


Dec 6 2012 Agence France-Presse

RABAT - Young women from the Philippines  working as housemaids in Morocco on Wednesday described being exploited, physically abused and raped by their employers in the north African kingdom.
"I was confined in the house of this woman, who confiscated my passport. To get it back, she told me that I had to give her $4,000," Analissa Dalambines, a young Filipina, told reporters at a press conference in Rabat.
"I'm ready to give up the job that I've done for two and a half years and return to my country," she said, before shouting, with tears in her eyes: "My employer raped me."
"When I arrived in Morocco, I was hired by a woman who beat me regularly," another women told the conference, convened by the Democratic Organisation of Labour (OTD), weeping as she spoke.
The honorary consul for the Philippines, Porto Joselito, said there are around 3,000 young Filipino housemaids in Morocco.

"Most of them are victims of poor treatment and exploitation, including sexual exploitation," he said.
Marcel Amiyeto, the secretary general of the immigrant workers' section of the ODT, one of Morocco's main trade unions, backed up the claims.
"Some of them have been raped or have been subjected to violence by the women that employ them, others have gone without being paid for more than a year," Amiyeto said.
Social Affairs Minister Bassima Hakkawi was not immediately reachable for comment.
Filipino housemaids in Morocco often have no work contracts and earn less than the minimum wage, of around 240 euros per month.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Trafficked maids to order: The darker side of richer India


NEW DELHI, Dec 4 (TrustLaw) - Inside the crumbling housing estates of Shivaji Enclave, amid the boys playing cricket and housewives chatting from their balconies, winding staircases lead to places where lies a darker side to India's economic boom.
Three months ago, police rescued Theresa Kerketa from one of these tiny two-roomed flats. For four years, she was kept here by a placement agency for domestic maids, in between stints as a virtual slave to Delhi's middle-class homes.

"They sent me many places - I don't even know the names of the areas," said Kerketa, 45, from a village in Chhattisgarh state in central India. "Fifteen days here, one month there. The placement agent kept making excuses and kept me working. She took all my salary."
Often beaten and locked in the homes she was sent to, Kerketa was forced to work long hours and denied contact with her family. She was not informed when her father and husband died. The police eventually found her when a concerned relative went to a local charity, which traced the agency and rescued her together with the police.
Abuse of migrant maids from Africa and Asia in the Middle East and parts of Southeast Asia is commonly reported.

But the story of Kerketa is the story of many maids and nannies in India, where a surging demand for domestic help is fuelling a business that, in large part, thrives on human trafficking by unregulated placement agencies.

As long as there are no laws to regulate the placement agencies or even define the rights of India's unofficially estimated 90 million domestic workers, both traffickers and employers may act with impunity, say child and women's rights activists and government officials.
Activists say the offences are on the rise and link it directly to the country's economic boom over the last two decades.

"Demand for maids is increasing because of the rising incomes of families who now have money to pay for people to cook, clean and look after their children," says Bhuwan Ribhu from Bachpan Bachao Andolan (Save the Childhood Movement), the charity that helped rescue Kerketa.
Economic reforms that began in the early 1990s have transformed the lifestyles of many Indian families. Now almost 30 percent of India's 1.2 billion people are middle class and this is expected to surge to 45 percent by 2020.

Yet as people get wealthier, more women go out to work and more and more families live on their own without relatives to help them, the voracious demand for maids has outstripped supply.
BEHIND CLOSED DOORS
There are no reliable figures for how many people are trafficked for domestic servitude. The Indian government says 126,321 trafficked children were rescued from domestic work in 2011/12, a rise of almost 27 percent from the previous year. Activists say if you include women over 18 years, the figure could run into the hundreds of thousands.

The abuse is difficult to detect as it is hidden within average houses and apartments, and under-reported, because victims are often too fearful to go to the police. There were 3,517 incidents relating to human trafficking in India in 2011, says the National Crime Records Bureau, compared to 3,422 the previous year.

Conviction rates for typical offences related to trafficking - bonded labor, sexual exploitation, child labor and illegal confinement - are also low at around 20 percent. Cases can take up to two years to come to trial, by which time victims have returned home and cannot afford to return to come to court. Police investigations can be shoddy due to a lack of training and awareness about the seriousness of the crime.

Under pressure from civil society groups as well as media reports of cases of women and children trafficked not just to be maids, but also for prostitution and industrial labor, authorities have paid more attention in recent years.
In 2011, the government began setting up specialized anti-human trafficking units in police stations throughout the country.

There are now 225 units and another 110 due next year whose job it is to collect intelligence, maintain a database of offenders, investigate reports of missing persons and partner with charities in raids to rescue victims.
Parveen Kumari, director in charge of anti-trafficking at the ministry of home affairs, says so far, around 1,500 victims have been rescued from brick kilns, carpet weaving and embroidery factories, brothels, placement agencies and houses.
"We realize trafficking is a bigger issue now with greater demand for labor in the cities and these teams will help," said Kumari. "The placement agencies are certainly under the radar."

NATIONAL HEADLINES
The media is full of reports of minors and women lured from their villages by promises of a good life as maids in the cities. They are often sent by agencies to work in homes in Delhi, and its satellite towns such as Noida and Gurgaon, where they face a myriad of abuses.
In April, a 13-year-old maid heard crying for help from the balcony of a second floor flat in a residential complex in Delhi's Dwarka area became a national cause célèbre.
The girl, from Jharkhand state, had been locked in for six days while her employers went holidaying in Thailand. She was starving and had bruises all over her body.
The child, who had been sold by a placement agency, is now in a government boarding school as her parents are too poor to look after her. The employers deny maltreatment, and the case is under investigation, said Shakti Vahini, the Delhi-based child rights charity which helped rescue her.
In October, the media reported the plight of a 16-year-old girl from Assam, who was also rescued by police and Shakti Vahini from a house in Delhi's affluent Punjabi Bagh area. She had been kept inside the home for four years by her employer, a doctor. She said he would rape her and then give her emergency contraceptive pills. The doctor has disappeared.

ONE ON EVERY BLOCK
Groups like Save the Children and ActionAid estimate there are 2,300 placement agencies in Delhi alone, and less than one-sixth are legitimate.
"There are so many agencies and we hear so many stories, but we are not like that. We don't keep the maids' salaries and all are over 18," said Purno Chander Das, owner of Das Nurse Bureau, which provides nurses and maids in Delhi's Tughlakabad village.
The Das Nurse Bureau is registered with authorities - unlike many agencies operating from rented rooms or flats in slums or poorer neighborhoods like Shivaji Enclave in west Delhi. It is often to these places that maids are brought until a job is found.
There are no signboards, but neighbors point out the apartments that house the agencies and talk of the comings and goings of girls who stay for one or two days before being taken away.
"There is at least one agency in every block," says Rohit, a man in his twenties, who lives in one of scores of dilapidated government-built apartment blocks in Shivaji Enclave.
With a commission fee of up to 30,000 rupees ($550) and a maids' monthly salary of up to 5,000 rupees ($90), an agency can make more than $1,500 annually for each girl, say anti-trafficking groups.

A ledger recovered after one police raid, shown by the charity Bachpan Bachao Andolan to Thomson Reuters Foundation, had the names, passport pictures and addresses of 111 girls from villages in far-away states like West Bengal, Jharkhand, Assam and Chhattisgarh, most of them minors.
The Delhi state government has written a draft bill to help regulate and monitor placement agencies and has invited civil society groups to provide feedback.
But anti-trafficking groups say what is really needed a country-wide law for these agencies, which are not just mushrooming in cities like Delhi but also Mumbai and other towns and cities.
The legislation would specify minimum wages, proper living and working conditions and a mechanism for financial redress for unpaid salaries. It would also specify that placement agencies keep updated record of all domestic workers which would subject to routine inspection by the labor department.

In the meantime, victims like Theresa Kerketa just want to warn others.
"The agencies and their brokers tell you lies. They trap you in the city where you have no money and know no one," said Kerketa, now staying with a relative in a slum on the outskirts of south Delhi as she awaits compensation.
"I will go back and tell others. It is better to stay in your village, be beaten by your husband and live as a poor person, than come to the city and suffer at the hands of the rich."

(TrustLaw is a global news service covering human rights and governance issues and run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters)
(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Monday, December 10, 2012

Argentine Mom rescues hundreds of sex slaves


Associated Press/Victor R. Caivano - President Cristina Fernandez, right, applauds as Susana Trimarco, left, lifts a human rights prize given by the president during a rally to mark the 29th anniversary of the return to democracy in Argentina, on the eve of the Human Rights Day, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012. Trimarco is known for her crusade to find her daughter, Maria de los Angeles "Marita" Veron, who disappeared in 2002, and who is believed to had been kidnapped by human traffickers. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)

LA PLATA, Argentina (AP) —
Susana Trimarco was a housewife who fussed  over her family and paid scant attention to the news until her daughter left for a doctor's appointment and never came back.

After getting little help from police, Trimarco launched her own investigation into a tip that the 23-year-old was abducted and forced into sex slavery. Soon, Trimarco was visiting brothels seeking clues about her daughter and the search took an additional goal: rescuing sex slaves and helping them start new lives.

What began as a one-woman campaign a decade ago developed into a movement and Trimarco today is a hero to hundreds of women she's rescued from Argentine prostitution rings. She's been honored with the "Women of Courage" award by the U.S. State Department and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize on Nov. 28. Sunday night, President Cristina Fernandez gave her a human rights award before hundreds of thousands of people in the Plaza de Mayo.
But years of exploring the decadent criminal underground haven't led Trimarco to her daughter, Maria de los Angeles "Marita" Veron, who was 23 in 2002 when she disappeared from their hometown in provincial Tucuman, leaving behind her own 3-year-old daughter Micaela.
"I live for this," the 58-year-old Trimarco told The Associated Press of her ongoing quest. "I have no other life, and the truth is, it is a very sad, very grim life that I wouldn't wish on anyone."
Her painful journey has now reached a milestone.
Publicity over Trimarco's efforts prompted Argentine authorities to make a high-profile example of her daughter's case by putting 13 people on trial for allegedly kidnapping Veron and holding her as a sex slave in a family-run operation of illegal brothels. Prostitution is not illegal in Argentina, but the exploitation of women for sex is.

A verdict is expected Tuesday after a nearly yearlong trial.
The seven men and six women have pleaded innocent and their lawyers have said there's no physical proof supporting the charges against them. The alleged ringleaders denied knowing Veron and said that women who work in their brothels do so willingly. Prosecutors have asked for up to 25 years imprisonment for those convicted.
Trimarco was the primary witness during the trial, testifying for six straight days about her search for her daughter.

The road to trial was a long one.
Frustrated by seeming indifference to her daughter's disappearance, Trimarco began her own probe and found a taxi driver who told of delivering Veron to a brothel where she was beaten and forced into prostitution. The driver is among the defendants.
With her husband and granddaughter in tow, Trimarco disguised herself as a recruiter of prostitutes and entered brothel after brothel searching for clues. She soon found herself immersed in the dangerous and grim world of organized crime, gathering evidence against police, politicians and gangsters.

"For the first time, I really understood what was happening to my daughter," she said. "I was with my husband and with Micaela, asleep in the backseat of the car because she was still very small and I had no one to leave her with."
The very first woman Trimarco rescued taught her to be strong, she said.
"It stuck with me forever: She told me not to let them see me cry, because these shameless people who had my daughter would laugh at me, and at my pain," Trimarco said. "Since then I don't cry anymore. I've made myself strong, and when I feel that a tear might drop, I remember these words and I keep my composure."
Micaela, now 13, has been by her grandmother's side throughout, contributing to publicity campaigns against human trafficking and keeping her mother's memory alive.
More than 150 witnesses testified in the trial, including a dozen former sex slaves who described brutal conditions in the brothels.

Veron may have been kidnapped twice, with the complicity of the very authorities who should have protected her, according to Julio Fernandez, who now runs a Tucuman police department devoted to investigating human trafficking. He testified that witnesses reported seeing Veron at a bus station three days after she initially disappeared, and that a police officer from La Rioja, Domingo Pascual Andrada, delivered her to a brothel there. Andrada, now among the defendants, denied knowing any of the other defendants, let alone Veron.

Other Tucuman police testified that when they sought permission in 2002 to search La Rioja brothels, a judge made them wait for hours, enabling Veron's captors to move her. That version was supported by a woman who had been a prostitute at the brothel: She testified that Veron was moved just before police arrived. The judge, Daniel Moreno, is not on trial. He denied delaying the raid or having anything to do with the defendants.

Some of the former prostitutes said they had seen Veron drugged and haggard. One testified Veron felt trapped and missed her daughter. Another said she spotted Veron with dyed-blonde hair and an infant boy she was forced to conceive in a rape by a ringleader. A third thought Veron had been sold to a brothel in Spain — a lead reported to Interpol.
Trimarco's campaign to find her daughter led the State Department to provide seed money for a foundation in Veron's name. To date, it has rescued more than 900 women and girls from sex trafficking. The foundation also provides housing, medical and psychological aid, and it helps victims sue former captors.

Argentina outlawed human trafficking in 2008, thanks in large part to the foundation's work. A new force dedicated to combating human trafficking has liberated nearly 3,000 more victims in two years, said Security Minister Nilda Garre, who wrote a newspaper commentary saying the trial's verdict should set an example.
Whatever the verdict, Trimarco's lawyer, Carlos Garmendia, says the case has already made a difference.

"Human trafficking was an invisible problem until the Marita (Veron) case," Garmendia said. "The case has put it on the national agenda."
But Trimarco wants more. "I had hoped they would break down and say what they'd done with Marita," she said.
"I feel here in my breast that she is alive and I'm not going to stop until I find her," Trimarco said. "If she's no longer in this world, I want her body."

It gave me strenght to know i wasnt alone....

Growing up in poverty in a suburb in Yangon, Myanmar, the offer of a job in a textile factory seemed like a dream come true. But on the way to what Thazin thought was a factory job, she learned she’d been sold to a man to be his ‘wife.’
After encountering other women living in slavery in the community, Thazin decided to escape. “It gave me strength to know I wasn’t alone.” Her first attempt failed. On the second, she made it home.
In a few days, thousands of Myanmar people at the greatest risk for forced labour and sexual exploitation will be given critical information for safe migration that does not lead to modern slavery. They will also feel the solidarity of the world standing with them at their first international concert.

We’ll be there and will personally deliver messages to the audience, showing the people of Myanmar that the world stands with them in their fight against modern slavery. Will you be part of this historic stand against modern slavery by signing one of the cards we’ll deliver to the people of Myanmar?
http://www.walkfree.org/messages2myanmar
Do you remember your first concert? The bright lights, the thrum of the music and the feel of a crowd swaying and singing as one?
You probably saved the ticket, t-shirt, buttons, and photos from your first concert for years; on December 16th, someone in Myanmar will treasure all of their mementos from their first concert - including a note from you.

We’ll be in Myanmar officially announcing the Walk Free movement and as one of the first activists, we’d love for you to join us. If you can’t be there in person, share the experience by supporting the people of Myanmar’s fight again modern slavery by signing one of the cards we’ll deliver:
http://www.walkfree.org/messages2myanmar
Thank you in advance for your support. Once you’ve sent your message, please help us get the word out by forwarding this email to everyone you know.
Thank you,
Debra, Hayley, Jacqui, Nick, Jess, Mich, Amy, Jessica and the Walk Free team