Tag Archives: Taiwan

[Statement] CHR spokesperson, Atty Jacqueline Ann de Guia, on the move to deport a Taiwan OFW over online criticisms against the government

Statement of CHR spokesperson, Atty Jacqueline Ann de Guia, on the move to deport a Taiwan OFW over online criticisms against the government

The Commission on Human Rights notes that our overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) continue to be one of the sectors hardest hit by the consequences of lockdowns across the world. Many of these Filipinos, hailed as ‘modern heroes,’ are forced by current circumstances to head back home without any certainty of jobs to go back to.

In similar instances, our Philippine Overseas Labor Offices (POLOs) are present in different countries as an extension of our government’s Department of Labor and Employment. Their primary mandate is to promote and protect the general welfare of OFWs.

As one of the direct contacts to the Philippine government, POLOs deal with an array of OFW concerns, including violations of work contracts while in host countries, providing temporary shelters when necessary, ensuring medical assistance, and assisting in the repatriation of workers, among others, especially in times of crises.

It is then a cause of concern when a Labor Attaché works towards the deportation of Filipina caregiver, later named Elanel Egot Ordidor employed in Yunlin County, Taiwan, over what appears to be an exercise of her right to express concerns on the plight of fellow Filipinos in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic.

A statement of the Labor Secretary on Sunday, 26 April, assured that ’there will be an observance of due process.’ However, we equally stress that our Bill of Rights, enshrined in the 1987 Constitution, also guarantees the citizens’ freedom of speech, of expression, or the right of the people to petition the government for a redress of grievance.

We continue to remind the government that public service requires a higher tolerance for opinions and criticisms, especially that democracy works best when there are healthy discourses on governance; thereby, allowing greater accountability from our public officials.

While the government continues to cite that certain rights can be restricted in the context of public emergencies, we caution against the application of these restrictions beyond the allowable parameters of human rights law—that they should always be legal, necessary, and proportionate. Any overreach may result in human rights violations.

In the face of a pandemic which threatens almost every aspect of our life, we hope that the government, including its representatives here and abroad, can direct greater efforts in preserving the rights and dignity of Filipinos by finding ways to curb the transmission of the virus and cushion its impacts, especially to vulnerable sectors.

We continue to reiterate that laws, including the declaration of a national health emergency, are ultimately meant to protect rights. Holding public office grants powers, but also entails great responsibilities—to respect, protect, and fulfill human rights.

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[From the web] A criminal love by Naomi Fontanos

A criminal love.
By Naomi Fontanos
Philippine Daily Inquirer
September 1, 2013

GANDA FILIPINAS

In Europe, adultery is no longer a crime. In the United States, around 30 states have abolished their adultery laws. In October 2012, the United Nations Working Group on discrimination against women in law and in practice issued a joint statement calling on governments of the world to repeal their adultery laws because they led to discrimination and violence against women. In spite of these, in August 2013, first-time lawmaker Edcel “Grex” Lagman filed House Bill No. 2352 to amend the provision on adultery under the Revised Penal Code. HB 2352 seeks to penalize married spouses who have sexual intercourse with same-sex partners.

My Husband’s Lover bill. HB 2352 is more popularly called My Husband’s Lover bill after the title of a primetime TV show that depicts what the proposed legislation wants to address. “My Husband’s Lover” is about the life of a woman, Lally, who is married to a man, Vincent, with whom she has children. Later, the show reveals that Vincent is still emotionally and physically attracted to an old lover, another man named Eric. The show has become hugely popular, prompting the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines to call for a morality check on the show. In defense, the show’s creators issued a statement saying that their program depicts “real-life situations.”

To be clear, marriage in the Philippines remains exclusively heterosexual. That is why HB 2352 surprised many in the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community. In media interviews, Lagman asks LGBT Filipinos to support HB 2352. After all, he said, the measure pushes for equal rights of LGBT people and is a step toward gender equality. In the bill’s explanatory note, he qualifies this support by saying: “Although I am open and supportive of gender equality, we must not limit its concept [to] the positive side of things. Just like in a marriage, equality should be present ‘for better or for worse.’ Meaning, equality must be upheld both in the rewards and as well as in the sanctions given by the society. If the LGBT group insists on equal rights, they must also be prepared to accept and carry the burden of equal liability and responsibility. That is the essence of democracy.”

In actuality, no national law has ever been enacted to specifically protect or promote the rights of LGBT Filipinos. In fact, since 1999, attempts to pass into law an Anti-Discrimination bill that would penalize discriminatory practices toward members of the LGBT community have been repeatedly thwarted in Congress. Through the years, documented cases have accumulated showing LGBT Filipinos at the receiving end of abusive and discriminatory treatment based on their sexual orientation and gender identity in their own homes and communities, workplaces, schools and in public and private institutions and establishments. Even in places where there are local ordinances meant to protect them, LGBT Filipinos continue to experience discrimination. Not surprisingly, many LGBT rights advocates have rejected HB 2352.

Legal stigmatization of gender and sexuality. HB 2352 comes on the heels of recently passed laws that rights advocates have opposed. To the dismay of many, the Philippine government under President Aquino has enacted several laws that stigmatize gender and sexuality.

In March 2012, Republic Act No. 10158, which seeks to decriminalize vagrancy, was signed into law. Many women’s rights organizations opposed RA 10158 because of its problematic definition of vagrancy. Under RA 10158, vagrants are only prostitutes and prostitutes are only women. In August 2012, the President approved RA 10172 which allows a change in the date of birth and gender in the birth certificate in case of clerical errors. The law explicitly states, however, that change in gender will not cover those who have undergone a “sex change or sex transplant.” Transgender rights advocates protested the inclusion of the phrase sex transplant in the wording of the law because it is a nonexistent medical procedure. Its inclusion violates rules of clarity and nonambiguity, to which legislation is expected to adhere, but to no avail. In September 2012, RA 10175, also known as the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, was signed into law. It has become one of the most unpopular pieces of legislation under the Aquino administration. RA 10175 criminalizes cybersex along with other online activities. The law has been assailed for its intent to curtail Internet freedom and its violation of people’s freedom of speech and expression. At least 15 petitions were filed at the Supreme Court, which has since issued a Temporary Restraining Order against RA 10175, suspending its implementation.

Lagman’s My Husband’s Lover bill, no doubt, has the potential to follow in the footsteps of these laws. It would be grossly ironic, given that the show after which it was named was presumably created to enlighten people about the real-life complexities of gender and sexuality. If passed into law, HB 2352 would be the first law in the Philippines to criminalize same-sex behavior. This would be unfortunate since the winds of change to abolish adultery in law books have already reached nearby countries. In Taiwan, women’s groups in March 2013 asked the government to abolish adultery from the Criminal Code because it is unfavorable to women. According to women’s rights advocates, Taiwan’s adultery law promotes legal discrimination and maintains pervasive gender inequality. HB 2352 would undoubtedly do the same.

This is a wake-up call then for advocates to bolster the fight for greater equality and genuine sexual and gender freedom in the Philippines.

Naomi Fontanos is a Filipino transgender rights advocate and cofounder of Gender and Development Advocates (Ganda) Filipinas, a Manila-based nonprofit committed to promote human rights in the context of development.

Read more: http://opinion.inquirer.net/60139/a-criminal-love#ixzz2dtdrtWpX

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Naomi Fontanos

Co-founder

GANDA Filipinas

WEBSITE:www.facebook.com/gandafilipinas

Gender and Development Advocates (GANDA) Filipinas* is a non-profit, non-partisan, and non-government organization advocating gender equality for all Filipinos. It is led by transgender women in the Philippines. GANDA Filipinas believes that gender is at the heart and center of issues of development including access to education, economic justice, environmental justice, and sexuality and reproductive health rights—areas where transgender voices are usually left out and neglected. GANDA Filipinas upholds the view that transgender rights are human rights.

*Ganda is the Filipino word for “beauty” or “beautiful.” It is a generic term of endearment Filipinos use to warmly call transgender women. Filipinas is the Hispanicized name of the Philippines used by the organization to call attention to the historical fact that people who could be interpreted as transgender in the modern sense already existed even during pre-colonial times.

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[Press Release] Labor group asks Taiwan government to ensure safety and job security of Filipino workers -PM

Labor group asks Taiwan government to ensure safety and job security of Filipino workers

pmLogo1

A Philippine labor group, on Wednesday, called on the Taiwanese government to ensure the safety and job security of thousands of Filipinos working in Taiwan.

In a picket held at the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (TECO) in Makati City, the Partido ng Manggagawa (Labor Party-Philippines) likewise appealed to the Taiwanese people to refrain from using violence against Filipino workers who have nothing to do with the current diplomatic row between the two countries over the death of a Taiwanese fisherman off the Balintang channel last May 9.

“We appeal to both the Taiwanese and Philippine governments to solve their diplomatic row not at the expense of our OFWs. Pending the result of investigations and the satisfaction of Taiwan’s demand for justice for fisherman Hung Shih-cheng, the safety and job security of Filipino workers in Taiwan must also be ensured as they face actual physical violence and threats of job loss,” stated Partido ng Manggagawa spokesperson Wilson Fortaleza.

Fortaleza said President Ma Ying-jeou’s order to freeze the hiring of Filipinos and a veiled threat of expulsion against the 87,000 OFWs currently working in Taiwan are both unfair and unjust.

“As workers, we are likewise interested in seeing justice served finally to fellow worker Hung and we won’t condone failure or inaction on the part of the Philippine government. But the quest of justice for Mr. Hung should not lead to unjust actions of fury against thousands of Filipinos in Taiwan,” said Fortaleza.

The labor party reiterated that migrant workers and their families are protected by international conventions (International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families) as migrants’ rights are human rights.

Migrants have the right to equal protection, non-discrimination, to work in safe working conditions and to be protected against unjust dismissal.

PRESS RELEASE
Partido ng Manggagawa
22 May 2013
Contact: Wilson Fortaleza
09053732185

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[in the news] Attacks on OFWs in Taiwan isolated – MECO chief -InterAksyon.com

Attacks on OFWs in Taiwan isolated – MECO chief
By InterAksyon.com
May 20, 2013

InterAksyon logo2

MANILA, Philippines – Chairman Amadeo Perez of the Taipei-based Manila Economic and Cultural Office (MECO) on Monday said that the two incidents of attacks on Filipino workers in Taiwan were “isolated cases involving gangsters.”

In a radio interview, the country’s de facto envoy to the island who has since returned to the country said police authorities in Taipei are already handling the two cases – a Filipino was hurt in the hand trying to parry an attack with a wooden stick (not a baseball bat) by gangsters and Filipinos in a dormitory were attacked for partying noisily in the middle of the night.

These cases were not related to the shooting incident in the Balintang Strait off Batanes.

Tension is high in the two countries after a 65-year-old Taiwanese fisherman was killed by the Philippine Coast Guard on May 9. The Coast Guard claimed the shooting was not intended to kill the man, but only to stop his boat from further intruding into Philippine waters.

Read full article @www.interaksyon.com

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[In the news] Another OFW injured in attack on dorm in Taiwan -GMA News

Another OFW injured in attack on dorm in Taiwan
May 19, 2013

gmanewsonline

At least one more overseas Filipino worker in Taiwan was injured in an attack on a dormitory for Filipinos Saturday night.

One of the OFWs, Marissa de Guzman, said the incident occurred Saturday night when a group of Taiwanese suddenly broke into their dormitory.

“Kagabi… binasag ng sumalakay ang harap at pintuan ng dormitoryo (Last night, a group of Taiwanese broke into the dormitory),” she said in an interview on dzBB radio.

She said one of the OFWs was injured and may have suffered a fractured hand.

Read full article @www.gmanetwork.com

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[In the news] Team formed for ‘harassed’ Filipinos in Taiwan -SunStar.com.ph

Team formed for ‘harassed’ Filipinos in Taiwan
May 18, 2013

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MANILA — The Manila Economic and Cultural Office (Meco) has formed a team that will handle reported cases of harassment against overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Taiwan, Malacañang said Saturday.

In an interview over dzRB Radyo ng Bayan, deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte reiterated the call to the Taiwanese people for calm and to spare from any harassment the Filipinos there who have nothing to do with the killing of 65-year-old Taiwanese fisherman Hung Shih-cheng off Batanes last May 9.

“I understand that the Meco has already formed a team to focus on these reports and Meco is assuring that all verified reports that they could get would immediately be sent to the Ministry ng Foreign Affairs of Taiwan so that they could be given attention and investigated,” she said.

Citizens’ Battle Against Crime and Corruption (Cibac) party-list Representative Sherwin Tugna also called on government to ensure the safety of OFWs in Taiwan.

“Reports of untoward incidents on our OFWs are very alarming and needs to be addressed by the Palace,” he said.

Read full article @www.sunstar.com.ph

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[Statement] Aquino Admin, Solve the Ph-Taiwan Dispute & Protect the Rights and Welfare of Fil Migrant Workers -KAAGAPAY OFW

Demanding and Calling for Urgent Action of the Aquino Administration in Solving the PhilippineTaiwan Dispute and Protecting the Rights and Welfare of Filipino Migrant Workers in Taiwan

KAAGAPAY OFW

This is in relation to the current face-off of the Philippine and Taiwanese Government which have put the welfare of the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Taiwan at risk. The alleged intentional shooting of the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) to a Taiwanese fishing boat which was an act of ‘self-defense and were only performing their duty of stopping illegal fishing and poaching inside the Philippine territory’ after claiming that the said boat ‘had tried to ram its vessel near Batanes’ actually killed a 65-year old Taiwanese fisherman. This then flared up the outrage of the Taiwanese not only towards the Philippine government but to the Filipino people. As a way of its dissatisfaction to the response from the Philippine government on the matter, it banned the recruitment of Filipino workers, banned its citizens in travelling to the country, and even its own citizens refused selling goods to Filipinos in Taiwan. If this is not resolved, 95,000 documented OFWs in Taiwan will be affected.

Thus, we are calling for both parties to immediately resolve this dispute in any peaceful and diplomatic means.

We call for the Philippine Government to immediately craft solutions addressing the dispute while executing measures that would protect and uphold the welfare of OFWs in Taiwan.
We call for the Taiwanese government to be open for diplomatic negotiations and discussions with the Philippine government on how to resolve this issue.

We call for all the workers in Taiwan to remove divisions created by culture and nationality and to be united instead for the workers’ welfare and rights.

As we always demand and call, Philippine government should strengthen self-sustaining local economy that would provide decent employment for Filipinos.

KAAGAPAY OFW Resource and Service Center, Inc
Cotabato City, Mindanao, Philippines
kaagapaycotabato98@gmail.com

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[In the news] Palace ‘expresses sorrow’ for Taiwanese fisherman’s death -GMANews

Palace ‘expresses sorrow’ for Taiwanese fisherman‘s death
GMANews
May 12, 2013

gmanewsonlineMalacañang on Sunday expressed “regret” over the death of a 65-year-old Taiwanese fisherman in a shooting incident off disputed waters last Thursday.

Deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte said Manila Economic and Cultural Office representative Antonio Basilio already visited the family of the victim and “offered his apologies on behalf of the Philippine government.”

“As the Philippine Coast Guard has stated, we express our heartfelt sorrow on the unfortunate situation that occurred during one of the anti-illegal fishing patrols conducted by a Philippine fishery law enforcement vessel (MCS 3001) within the maritime jurisdiction (waters off the Batanes group of islands) of the Philippines on the morning of May 9, which tragically resulted in the death of a fisherman from one of the fishing vessels reportedly poaching in the area,” a Malacañang statement quoted her as saying.

Read full article @www.gmanetwork.com

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[Event] Global campaign targeting violence against women -One Billion Rising

Global campaign targeting violence against women
February 05, 2013

one-billion-logo-square-640x550The US-based One Billion Rising campaign is calling for 1 billion women and men around the world to raise awareness of violence against women by walking out and dancing on the streets on Feb. 14, said the Garden of Hope Foundation, which is heading the campaign in Taiwan.

Janelle Chung (鍾曉慧), a Singaporean who is in Taiwan for a 63-day cycling tour around the nation to celebrate her 30th birthday, said she hopes to recruit at least 1,000 Taiwanese to join the movement.

Chung said that before coming to Taiwan she read about the internationally reported case of an Indian woman who died following a gang rape in New Delhi, prompting her to join the foundation’s initiative.

She also hoped that people will buy the foundation’s Hakka flower-pattern headscarf, the proceeds of which will be donated to female victims of violence and child welfare activities, she said.

The name of the One Billion Rising campaign is based on statistics indicating that one in three women on the planet will be beaten or raped during their lifetime, the foundation said.

With the world population at 7 billion, this adds up to more than 1 billion women and girls who are living under such risk, it said.

The campaign was initiated by the US-based nonprofit V-Day organization, which was founded 15 years ago by playwright Eve Ensler, whose play The Vagina Monologues grabbed the world’s attention.

The One Billion Rising campaign is V-Day’s most ambitions project, with more than 5,000 organizations and 161 countries having signed up to participate, the foundation said.

Following stops last year in countries including Australia, the US, the UK and the Philippines, Ensler will visit India and Bangladesh this month.

Source: http://onebillionrising.org/

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[In the news] US to deport Taiwanese official who abused Filipina maids – GMA News

US to deport Taiwanese official who abused Filipina maids.

Reuters

January 28, 2012

 CHICAGO – A US federal judge in Missouri ordered the deportation on Friday of an official from Taiwan who pleaded guilty last year to human trafficking charges for abusing her two Filipina maids, the US attorney’s office said.

Hsien-Hsien Liu, the 64-year-old director general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Kansas City, Missouri, was arrested in November and charged with fraud in foreign labor contracting in connection with her treatment of the two maids.

Liu ultimately admitted to forcing the two women, whom she hired in the Philippines and brought to work for her in the United States between 2009 and 2011, to toil day and night for significantly less pay than promised in their contracts.

US District Judge Greg Kays in Kansas City sentenced Liu, who has been in custody since her arrest, to time served and ordered her deported back to Taiwan as part of a plea deal.

Read full article @ www.gmanetwork.com

[In the news] Binondo shopowners urged to pull out tainted Taiwanese foods – Interaksyon.com

Binondo shopowners urged to pull out tainted Taiwanese foods – Interaksyon.com.

MANILA, PhilippinesEnvironmental activists on Tuesday marched through the streets of Binondo district, Manila’s Chinatown, urging shopowners to pull Taiwanese food products suspected of being tainted with a chemical used in plastics manufacturing.

Photo by InterAksyon.com

Photo by InterAksyon.com

“AlerToxic Patrollers” of the Eco-Waste Coalition went from store to store with placards asking owners, “Don’t sell unless proven DEHP-free.”

The action came after the Taiwanese government ordered the massive recall of almost 500 brands of fruit jams and preserves, fruit juices, sports drinks, teas, food powers, and food or food supplement tablets manufactured by 155 companies which have been found contaminated with Di (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP),

Eco-Waste said data from Taiwan’s Food and Drug Administration showd that, as of last Friday, 465,638 bottles of DEHP-tainted beverages have been pulled out from store shelves, as well as 270,822 boxes and 68,924 packs of powdered probiotics and 28,539 kilos of fruit juices, fruit jam, powder and syrup, and yoghurt powder.

The activists also handed store owners a list of DEHP-tainted products.

DEHP makes plastic softer and more pliable.

“We have come here today with an urgent plea to all importers, distributors and vendors of high-risk beverage, food and medicinal goods from Taiwan to temporarily stop from selling such products until consumer safety from DEHP is totally guaranteed,”  Eco-Waste chemical safety campaigner Aileen Lucero said.