Wednesday, December 14, 2011

APOLINARIO MABINI et al. - Deported to Guam by U.S. Army (1901)


THE FILIPINO MIND blog contains 518 published postings you can view, as of December 20, 2011. Go to the sidebar to search Past & Related Postings, click LABEL [number in parenthesis = total of related postings]; or use the GOOGLE SEARCH at the sidebar using key words [labels, or tags] for topics of interest to you. Also at the bottom of each posting, you can click a label or tag to open related topics.



2. To write or read a comment, please scroll down to the bottom of this weblog htttp://www.thefilipinomind.blogspot.com/ (the current post or another post you read and may want to respond) and click on "Comments." ANONYMOUS COMMENTS WILL NOT BE POSTED EFFECTIVE 12/07/11.


3.Visit my other website to read/download publications: Click here:SCRIBD/TheFilipinoMind; or type it on GOOGLE Search.View/Free Download pdf versions of: postings, eBooks, articles (120 and growing). Or another way to access, go to the sidebar of the THE FILIPINO MIND website and click on SCRIBD. PLEASE Share!
Statistics for my associated website:SCRIBD/theFilipinoMind (as of 12/06/2011):
119 FREE AND DOWNLOADABLE documents
148,510 reads
2,750 downloads

4. Some postings and other relevant events are now featured inBMD_FacebookBMD_Twitter and BMD_Google Buzz. (<--- click each or all). Not so much to socialize but I try to maximize the available means for my mission.

(5) Translate to your own language. Go to the sidebar and Click on GOOGLE TRANSLATOR (56 languages - copy and paste sentences, paragraphs and whole articles, Google translates a whole posting in seconds, including to Filipino!!).
(6) As suggested by readers, added some contemporary music to provide a break from reading my "long" postings. See bottom of posting to play Sarah Brightman, Andrea Bocelli, Sting, Chris Botti, Josh Groban, etc. NOTE: Filipino Music links at blog sidebar. 

(7) Forwarding the postings to relatives and friends, ESPECIALLY in the homeland, is greatly appreciated. Use emails, Twitter, Facebook, Google Buzz etc. below. THANKS!!

(8) Songs on Filipino nationalism: please reflect on the lyrics (messages) as well as the beautiful renditions:

BAYAN KO by Freddie Aguilar <--- click to play song.

”Bayan Ko” by KUH LEDESMA <--click to play song.


***************************
"Those who profess to favor freedom
and yet deprecate agitation

are men who want crops without 
plowing up the ground;
they want rain without thunder and
lightning.
They want the ocean without the
awful roar of its waters.
This struggle may be a moral one
or it may be a physical one

or it may be both moral and physical
but it must be a struggle.
Power concedes nothing without a
demand
It never did, and never will." – Frederick Douglass
,
 AmericanAbolitionistLecturerAuthor and Slave1817-1895)

***************


We native Filipinos, at the very least, all recognize Jose Rizal as a martyr-hero, given that all of us grew up learning about him, seeing his statue or other in our schools, town plazas, etc., and elevating him practically to a cult of personality by a few Filipinos. We know Rizal was in the forefront of the Propaganda Movement for Spanish reform in our homeland.  Thanks to native ilustrados then who were generally elitist (as most of today's so-called educated and from exclusive Catholic schools like Rizal was) and the American colonizers (who at the time were discarding the anti-imperialist stance of their Founding Fathers), Rizal was made "the" national hero because of his more acceptable reformist and thus less threatening outlook (rather than a revolutionary one, i.e. Andres Bonifacio).


In  comparison, we barely know much about Apolinario Mabini beyond being the "Dakilang Lumpo;" however with some inquiring effort, we can know/understand that Mabini moved beyond propaganda, to discover that he has actively engaged in revolutionary activities against the Spaniards and much more so thereafter, against the American invaders.  We natives ought to know more about him and other Filipino heroes. Hopefully they are still being taught and learned in today's schools. Since we Filipinos think hierarchically, let us put Mabini way up there, if not higher, with Rizal (and Andres Bonifacio).

Apolinario Mabini has earned the title "Brains of the Revolution." Having been the chief adviser to General Emilio Aguinaldo during:  the revolutionary struggles against the Spaniards, the short-lived Republic established at Malolos and  the subsequent Philippine-American War. This latter war, which was years longer than the months-long Spanish-American War, was/is continually denigrated as an "insurrection" for almost a century and glossed over in school textbooks and popular history books in America, etc. 

Mabini was one of the few uncompromising patriots (another was General Antonio Luna, the ablest Filipino revolutionary soldier, who was assassinated). He was more than just a thorn in the ass of the duplicitous invading Americans (1898), then nascent imperial power and new colonial master of native Filipinos. 


Mabini believed that a foreign nation does not colonize another nation for purely altruistic reasons. Imagine seeing President McKinley doing his claimed hogwash -on his knees praying about what to do with the Islands- as narrated in school and military textbooks, etc.  Mabini was proven correct by our past and ongoing national/people's history. 

While imprisoned by the Americans, Mabini wrote many articles on independence, political rights and against alternatives to political independence i.e.political autonomy proposed by some early pro-American Filipinos like Pedro Paterno, Felipe Buencamino, T.H. Pardo de Tavera, etc.. Mabini believed in the importance of bravely expressing one's political beliefs


He was considered a dangerous and uncompromising insurgent who aroused enthusiasm to keep the struggle alive. When amnesty was proclaimed on June 1900, Mabini refused to take the oath of allegiance to the United States, which was the condition for release. 

Mabini was consistently opposed to other former/fellow members in the short-lived Malolos Congress who readily sold-out to the winning Americans and formed the "Partido Federal" which he labeled a "party of convenience." 

The Federalistas included such prominent/educated elite such as TH Pardo de Tavera, Cayetano Arellano, Benito Legarda, Felipe Buencamino, Tomas del Rosario, Teodoro Yangco. TH Pardo de Tavera stated that "..all the efforts of the party will be directed to the Americanization of the Filipinos and the spread of the English language... ." Many of these guys are taught in schools to be our "heroes" and our streets are named after these early quislings; subsequently emulated by many of our supposed leaders in government, military and business, past and present. 


Unwittingly, generations of native Filipinos were conditioned and grew up with reverence for such traitors to our homeland.  And subtly worst, our generations of so-called leaders in government, military and business perennially exhibit a beholden, mendicant, and kiss-ass behavior towards foreigners (Americans et al.) at the expense of the common good for native Malay Filipinos.

The U.S. Army under Major General Arthur MacArthur (Gen. Douglas MacArthur's dad) implemented more stringent means to facilitate the so-called ”pacification campaign" by deporting ranked revolutionists and their intellectual/nationalist sympathizers. The Army considered Mabini as one of the latter prominent people who encouraged the continuation of the revolutionary struggle, now via guerrilla warfare.  It therefore had Mabini shipped to Guam. 

MacArthur wrote to the U.S. Senate that: "Mabini deported as most active agitator persistently and defiantly refusing amnesty and maintaining extensive correspondence with insurgents in the field while living in Manila under protection of the United States, also for offensive statements in recent proclamation enforcing laws of war. His deportation is absolutely essential."

On July 4, 1902 President Theodore Roosevelt offered another amnesty after he proclaimed that the insurrection (Philippine-American War) was over. Mabini and Gen, Artemio Ricarte refused again to take the oath of allegiance. So the two were not released and remained in exile in Guam. 


U.S. Secretary of War Elihu Root stated in a letter to Pres. Roosevelt that: "...to prevent the great body of ignorant natives from being led again into the horrors of insurrection and civil war, should prevail over any sentimental consideration over this one individual (Mabini)...." 

Governor-General William H. Taft (later U.S. President Taft) wrote in 1903: "Mabini has been a consistent opponent of American sovereignty and a persistent inspirer of rebellion and insurrection. he was for a very long time the chief adviser of Aguinaldo. He has manifested much skill and cunning in his appeal to the people of the Philippine islands against the American Government, and may be said to be the most prominent irreconcilable among the Filipinos. 

If he were allowed to come to Manila he would form a nucleus for all the discontented elements which he would be certain to encourage in every form of plot and conspiracy against the existing government. Nothing he write, nothing he says, but contains unjust insinuations against the American Government and its good faith...What he desires is to be brought to Manila, because he thinks that even if imprisoned here he will form a point of concentration for the rapidly diminishing number of irreconcilables in these Islands.

I think it would be unwise to allow him to come unless he is willing in advance, by his oath of allegiance, to agree not to plot against this Government.." 

On February 1903, Mabini was formally notified that he was not a prisoner and can leave Guam to go anywhere but not land in the Philippines without taking the oath of allegiance. He could not bear dying elsewhere and so he took the oath. He died on May 13,1903  less than three months since his return from exile.


Below documents are U.S. Army deportation orders issued during the Philippine-American War, which I stumbled upon while doing a Goggle Search about Mabini.

- Bert


Reference: The excellent (analytical), well-researched  book: "MABINI and the PHILIPPINE REVOLUTION" by the late U.P. Prof. Cesar Adib Majul (1960).



"A revolution is the violent means utilized by a people, in the employment of their right of sovereignty which properly belongs to them, to destroy a duly constituted government, substituting for it another in more consonance with reason and justice."
 - Apolinario Mabini (La Revolucion Filipina, Volume 1)



"Capitalism and altruism are incompatible; they are philosophical opposites; they cannot coexist in the same man or in the same society" - Ayn Rand, 1961 


*****************

U.S. ARMY ORDERS TO DEPORT MABINI et al.

HEADQUARTERS DIVISION OF THE PHILIPPINES
Manila, P. I., January 7, 1901
General Orders
No. 4.

In pursuance of authority obtained from the War Department by cable under date December 27, 1900, the following named persons, whose overt acts have clearly revealed them as in aid of, or in sympathy with, the insurrection and the irregular guerrilla warfare by which it is being maintained, and whose continued residence in these islands is, in every essential regard, inimical to the pacification thereof, will be deported at the earliest practicable date to the Island of Guam, there to be held under surveillance or in actual custody, as circumstances may require, during the further progress of hostilities and until such time as the
restoration of normal peace conditions in the Philippines has resulted in a public declaration of the termination of such hostilities:

General Officers: Artemio Ricarte, Pio del Pilar, Maximo Hizon, Mariano Llanera, Francisco de los Santos.

Colonels: Macario de Ocampo, Esteban Consortes, Lucas Camerino, Julian Gerona.

Lieutenant Colonels: Pedro Cubarrubias, Mariano Barruga, Hermogenes Plata, Cornelio Requestis.

Major: Fabian Villaruel.

Subordinate insurgent officers: Juan Leandro Villarino, Jose Mata, Ygmidio deJesus, Alipio Tecson.

Civil officials, insurgent agents, sympathizers, and agitators: Apolinario Mabini, Pablo Ocampo, Maximino Trias, Simon Tecson, Fio Varican, Anastasio Carmona, Mariano Sevilla. Manuel E. Roxas.


Bv Command of Major General MacArthur:
THOMAS H. BARRY,
Brigadier General, U. S. Volunteers,
Chief of Staff.




*************


Headquarters Division of the Philippines.
Manila, P. I., January 14, 1901.

Special Order No. 13

I. Lucino Almeida, a native, tried before a military commission which convened at San Fernando de la Union, Luzon, P. I., pursuant to paragraph 2, Special Orders, No. 42, series of 1900, Headquarters Department of Northern Luzon, whose sentence as promulgated in General Orders, No. 6, current series, these headquarters, was commuted to deportation to the Island of Guam, the prisoner there to remain during the continuance of the insurrection, will be sent there to  the Transport Rosecrans and will be turned over to Major Henry B. Orwig, 37th Infantry, U. S. Volunteers. The quartermaster's department will furnish the necessary transportation, and the subsistence department will arrange for his subsistence while en route.

Bv Command of Major General MacArthur:
S. D. STURGIS,
Assistant Adjutant General.


**********


HEADQUARTERS DIVISION OF THE PHILIPPINES.
Manila, P. I., January 15, 1901.
General Orders, No. 10.

In pursuance of authority obtained from the War Department by cable under date of December 27, 1900, the following named persons, whose overt acts have clearly revealed them as in aid of, or in sympathy with, the insurrection and the irregular guerrilla warfare by which it is being maintained, and whose continued residence in these islands is, in every essential regard, inimical to the pacification thereof, will be delivered to Major Henry B. Oricig, 37th Infantry, U.S. Volunteers, on board the Transport Rosecrans, for deportation to the Island of Guam, there to be held under surveillance or in actual custody, as circumstances may require, during the further progress of hostilities and until such time as the restoration of normal peace conditions in the Philippines has resulted in a public declaration of the termination of such hostilities:

Insurgent agents, organizers, sympathizers, correspondents, collectors and officials: Silvestre Legaspi, Juan Mauricio, Doroteo Espino, Bartolome de la Rosa, Norberto Dimayuga, Jose Buenaventura and Antonio Prisco Reyes.

Bv Command of Major General MacArthur:

THOMAS H. BARRY,
Brigadier General, U. S. Volunteers,
Chief of Staff.




*******************




HEADQUARTERS DIVISION OF THE PHILIPPINES.
Manila, P. I., January 22, 1901.
General Orders.
No. 12.

In pursuance of authority obtained from the War Department by cable under date of December 27, 1900, the following named insurgent prisoners, who were sent from the Province of Ilocos Norte, insurgent abettors, sympathizers and agitators, who belong to the Katipunan Society and took the oath of allegiance to the Americans for the purpose of facilitating revolutionary operations and agitation, and whose continued residence in these islands is, in every essential regard, inimical to the pacification thereof, will be delivered by the Provost Marshal General on board the U. S. N. Ship Solace for deportation to the Island of Guam, to be delivered to the Governor of that island and to be held under surveillance or in actual custody, as circumstances may require, during the further progress of hostilities and until such time as the restoration of normal peace conditions in the Philippines has resulted in a public declaration of the termination of such hostilities:

Roberto Salvante, Marcelo Ouintos, Paneraeio Palting, Jayme Morales, Gavino Domingo, Leon Flores, Florencio Castro, Pedro Erando, Inocente Cayetano, Pancracio Adiarte and Faustino Adiarte.

By Command of Major General MacArthur:
THOMAS H. BARRY,
Brigadier General, U. S. Volunteers
Chief of Staff.


Source: ANNUAL REPORT OF MAJOR GENERAL ARTHUR MACARTHUR, 1901, pages 13-15
(University of Toronto, Canada archives)

Share/Bookmark

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

The Plight of the Native Filipino OFWs -- Under the Modern Slavery institution, a by-product of Globalization [WTO]





THE FILIPINO MIND blog contains 515 published postings you can view, as of December 6, 2011. Go to the sidebar to search Past & Related Postings, click LABEL [number in parenthesis = total of related postings]; or use the GOOGLE SEARCH at the sidebar using key words [labels, or tags] for topics of interest to you. Also at the bottom of each posting, you can click a label or tag to open related topics.



2. To write or read a comment, please scroll down to the bottom of this weblog htttp://www.thefilipinomind.blogspot.com/ (the current post or another post you read and may want to respond) and click on "Comments." ANONYMOUS COMMENTS WILL NOT BE POSTED EFFECTIVE 12/07/11.


3.Visit my other website to read/download publications: Click here:SCRIBD/TheFilipinoMind; or type it on GOOGLE Search.View/Free Download pdf versions of: postings, eBooks, articles (120 and growing). Or another way to access, go to the sidebar of the THE FILIPINO MIND website and click on SCRIBD. PLEASE Share!
Statistics for my associated website:SCRIBD/theFilipinoMind (as of 12/06/2011):
119 FREE AND DOWNLOADABLE documents
148,510 reads
2,750 downloads

4. Some postings and other relevant events are now featured inBMD_FacebookBMD_Twitter and BMD_Google Buzz. (<--- click each or all). Not so much to socialize but I try to maximize the available means for my mission.

(5) Translate to your own language. Go to the sidebar and Click on GOOGLE TRANSLATOR (56 languages - copy and paste sentences, paragraphs and whole articles, Google translates a whole posting in seconds, including to Filipino!!).
(6) As suggested by readers, added some contemporary music to provide a break from reading my "long" postings. See bottom of posting to play Sarah Brightman, Andrea Bocelli, Sting, Chris Botti, Josh Groban, etc. NOTE: Filipino Music links at blog sidebar. 

(7) Forwarding the postings to relatives and friends, ESPECIALLY in the homeland, is greatly appreciated. Use emails, Twitter, Facebook, Google Buzz etc. below. THANKS!!

(8) Songs on Filipino nationalism: please reflect on the lyrics (messages) as well as the beautiful renditions:

BAYAN KO by Freddie Aguilar <--- click to play song.

”Bayan Ko” by KUH LEDESMA <--click to play song.


***************************
"Those who profess to favor freedom
and yet deprecate agitation

are men who want crops without 
plowing up the ground;
they want rain without thunder and
lightning.
They want the ocean without the
awful roar of its waters.
This struggle may be a moral one
or it may be a physical one

or it may be both moral and physical
but it must be a struggle.
Power concedes nothing without a
demand
It never did, and never will." – Frederick Douglass
,
 AmericanAbolitionistLecturerAuthor and Slave1817-1895)



****************************************

The Plight of the Native Filipino OFWs -- Under the Modern Slavery Institution, a by-product of Globalization [WTO]

We native Filipinos, depending on where we stand in the totem pole, have our own spins regarding our millions of OFWs. Our native rulers in government/military and business pay lip service to our contract emigrants by labeling them as "heroes",  as OFWs' dollar remittances make up/add to the billions unconscionably stolen from government coffers and/or as their departure for overseas work provide a societal relief valve that works to delay/prevent our social volcano from erupting, i.e. bloody revolution.  



Some in the Church (Roman Catholics, Protestant evangelicals, etc.) in addition see our OFWs as "Christian missionaries" who can proselytize about Christianity, forgetting that among them are Filipino Muslims. I doubt if any native, Filipino Christian/OFW entertain such, especially in the Middle Eastern Kingdoms. The task is not to proselytize/convert or withdraw from social justice concerns to concentrate solely on "personal salvation" ; but to practice authentic Christianity, i.e. the ignored catholic social teachings (or other religious traditions and social justice movements.)


A fellow native Filipino, who worked for an American company, wrote me to say that we natives are born to be slaves. I want to believe he is just being funny.


All these viewpoints are expressed apparently by persons who can not appreciate or do not empathize with, but may profit from, the daily existential struggles of the common tao -who is forced mainly by dire economic realities -brought about by WTO in the Philippines -to leave the homeland and loved ones. 


The below articles demonstrate the situations our fellow native Filipinos are in: what their personal miseries, the slavish treatment they undergo and how their supposed "heroism" are paid back particularly by those who loudly label our fellow native OFWs as "heroes." 




[NOTE: Rampant corruption in public offices, top to bottom is a symptom of disease: the disease of absent nationalism in combination with the disease of immature christianity/religion. Without being repetitive here, I just want to say that these have been discussed in previous posts.



It may be tiring and seemingly hopeless, but we need to keep alive, to continue the discussion of fundamental issues that cause our national predicament, especially to those fellow native Filipinos who are impoverished and/or illiterate, who can not escape/emigrate. 


And hopefully, for those who are truly concerned who can reach and help these neglected/despised majority gain an appreciation and understanding of "what's going on." Because without the impoverished majority knowing and understanding, they can not unite and act for radical changes that are way long overdue. 


We may not see the realization now or during our lifetime. But we have to try and do so, for the next generations. For another, there's no place like home, our country of birth. That's how I feel and think.
- Bert ]


“Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe.” 

– Frederick Douglass, American Abolitionist, Lecturer, Author and Slave, 1817-1895)

“To be poor and independent is very nearly an impossibility.” - William Corbett, 1830

"Upang maitindig natin ang bantayog ng ating lipunan, kailangang radikal nating baguhin hindi lamang ang ating mga institusyon kundi maging ang ating pag-iisip at pamumuhay. Kailangan ang rebolusyon, hindi lamang sa panlabas, kundi lalo na sa panloob!" --Apolinario Mabini, La Revolucion Filipina (1898)

 **********************
The Plight of the Native Filipino OFWs -- Under the Modern Slavery institution, a by-product of Globalization [WTO] :

Investigate Owwa for missing P21 million – Migrants group

PUBLISHED ON NOVEMBER 25, 2011, By INA ALLECO R. SILVERIO
Bulatlat.com
Next time overseas Filipino workers complain that they are not benefiting from the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA), they will know at least one reason why: their contributions might have been pocketed by corrupt officials.  
The OFW group Migrante International has called attention to a recent report of the Commission on Audit (COA) that the OWWA’s overseas officers have failed to remit more than P21 million ($488,372) in collections to OWWA’s Land Bank- Manila dollar account during the last 10 years. This prompted the group to call for an “immediate independent investigation” of the OWWA and its personnel both here and in offices abroad. Migrante’s chairman Garry Martinez said the audit should include investigations into the performance and financial transactions of OWWA’s officials including members of the Board of Trustees.
The COA said the multi-million-remittance failure has put the OWWA’s funds at risk of misappropriation. In its 2010 report on the agency, the audit authority said the dollar and euro collections from various foreign posts amounting to P21.587 million ($488,372) has been un-remitted “for a long period of time.” These funds comprise fees collected under the OWWA’s voluntary membership program. The program funds are intended for the immediate use of OFWs and their families for emergency concerns and related needs.
According to reports from the CoA, the overseas-based officers of OWWA’s are required to remit their monthly collections to the OWWA’s Land Bank-Manila dollar account not later than the fifth day of the following month. When the audit agency went through the OWWA’s records, however, it discovered that a staggering P21.587($488,372) million had not been remitted for periods ranging from one to 10 years.
The CoA 2010 report on the OWWA said that several of the officers who had the responsibility to remit the collections remain in service: but four have absconded or are absent without leave. In the meantime, another 10 have already resigned or moved to another agency. The audit agency also discovered that an employee of the Department of Labor and Employment remitted collections from Switzerland from October 2007 to December 2010. 

“With the period of time that has lapsed and continued failure of the collection officers, particularly those with large amounts of accountability, to remit the money, the possibility of the funds having been misappropriated cannot be discounted,” the CoA said. “Some of the funds may already be lost. Moreover, recovering the money may become difficult and may even be doubtful for those who have absconded or have been separated from the service.”

More anomalies
Migrante International’s Martinez said the un-remitted P21 million might just be the tip of the iceberg. “This appears to have been going on for a long time because no check-and-balance of OWWA funds is in place. We also believe that overseas officers cannot have pulled this off over a span of 10 years without the complicity and tolerance of people who are higher up the food chain,” Martinez said. 
He demanded that the COA should immediately release the names and embassies of those involved. The labor leader said Migrante has been calling for an investigation of OWWA for the longest time, prompting congressional inquiries. The group and allied organizations have also filed several graft and plunder cases before the Ombudsman and Department of Justice against OWWA officials.

Martinez cited former Armed Forces of the Philippines chief of staff Roy Cimatu’s failed rescue mission during the Lebanon crisis on 2006 when the OWWA released P150 million ($3.48 million) for the repatriation of OFWs. Out of more than 6,000 OFWs, only 1,000 were repatriated, but the International Organization for Migration (IOM) was able to repatriate 4,000 OFWs. “When asked where the OWWA funds went, Cimatu was mum about it,” Martinez said. The incident prompted several Senate hearings and it was then discovered that P6.8 billion ($158 million) of OWWA’s funds were transferred to the Development Bank of the Philippines and Landbank of the Philippines (P3.4 billion or $79 million in each transaction) without any consultation with the OFW sector.

Former solicitor general Frank Chavez also filed a case at the DOJ against former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo for alleged misuse and re-channeling of OWWA’s funds to various projects that had nothing to do with OFWs, among them the supposed evacuation of Filipinos from Iraq, Kuwait and Afghanistan in 2003. No actual evacuation of Filipinos took place, but the money disappeared.

Macapagal-Arroyo also reportedly transferred P100 Million ($2.32 million) from the Livelihood Development Program of the OWWA’s to the National Livelihood Support Fund under the Office of the President in September 2003. She and the other respondents are also accused of electoral fraud by “intending, facilitating and ordering the diversion of migrant workers’ trust funds from the OWWA to finance her campaign machinery starting 2003” with regard the release of Phil Health cards bearing Arroyo’s name and picture as an election campaign tactic in the 2004 elections. Martinez said some officers of the OWWA’s may have escaped accountability through the years on account of Section 5, provision (h), Article III of the OWWA’s Omnibus Policies that stipulates that all minutes, transcripts and tapes of the OWWA’s are confidential and not open to the public.

Go after OWWA officials
“If it is proven that OWWA’s funds were not used for the benefit of OFW s, the whole Board of Trustees should be recalled. Erring and corrupt officials are being protected by this provision in the OWWA’s Omnibus Policies. No need for consultations with stakeholders, they could do anything with OFWs’ money without consulting them,” he said. For its part, the CoA has already called on the OWWA to demand the immediate remittance of the full amount from the collecting officers concerned. It also said that the agency should withhold payment of any money to the collecting officers, and hold them accountable.  “The OWWA should get in touch with those who have gone Awol and demand that they settle their accountability for the un-remitted collections,” the COA said. (http://bulatlat.com)
*********************************

Labor trafficking victims of diplomats launch campaign in the US

PUBLISHED ON NOVEMBER 16, 2011, By INA ALLECO R. SILVERIO
Bulatlat.com
MANILA – Last week, domestic workers from various immigrant communities gathered at the Philippine consulate on 5th Avenue in Manhattan, New York to bring attention to the existence of modern-day slavery of domestic workers. They demanded enforcement of existing anti-trafficking laws to protect workers and punish foreign diplomats who have trafficked domestic workers into the United States. More than 75 women workers and their allies joined the rally that was also seen as a launch of a campaign focused on labor trafficking of domestic workers. In a letter addressed to the US State Department, the protestors led by an organization of Filipino domestic workers Damayan Migrant Workers Association and allied groups named seven countries with diplomats who they alleged are guilty of trafficking women domestic workers and forcing them into slavery; these countries are the Philippines, Kuwait, Tanzania, Mauritius, Saudi Arabia, India and Peru. They called the campaign “Baklas” (Filipino word for “dismantle”): Break Free from Labor Trafficking and Modern-Day Slavery and said that other worker centers, grassroots organizations and advocates against trafficking support it. The Urban Justice Center is also aiding the campaign.

In a letter to the US State Department, the campaign is seeking the enforcement of the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act 2008 by suspending the privilege of bringing domestic workers into the US of countries, the diplomats of which are found to be engaged in labor trafficking. In cases where domestic workers are demanding justice from these employers, groups are calling for the US State Department to press home countries to waive the diplomatic immunity of traffickers.

Helper settles civil case vs Philippine official
During the protest, Damayan announced the settlement of the civil case of one of its members Marichu Baoanan.
On June 24, 2008, with the assistance of Damayan and Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Baoanan filed a civil lawsuit of 15 counts including trafficking, forced labor, peonage and slavery against her former employers, Permanent Representative to the United Nations of the Philippines Lauro Baja, his wife Norma Baja, and their daughter Maria “Beth” Facundo.  

According to reports, Marichu was trafficked to the US by the Bajas and worked as a domestic worker in the Baja household for approximately three months. She was forced to work at least 18 hours a day, seven days a week, with no days off, for $100 or approximately six cents per hour. Invoking diplomatic immunity, the Bajas asked the court to dismiss the charges. After a one-year legal and organizing battle to waive Baja’s immunity, Judge Victor Marrero of the New York Southern District Court denied Baja’s motion and effectively removed his immunity so the case could proceed. Three years after filing, the case was recently settled.

According to Damayan and its allies, the problem is more than just a few bad actors. Damayan said that since Marichu’s case was exposed, more domestic workers have come forward. They related similar tales of being abused by diplomats, suffering experiences similar to Marichu’s: being forced to work extremely long hours for very low to no wages; having their passports stolen or confiscated by their employers; and being threatened with deportation. “We need to take a stand against trafficking and slavery,” said Cita Brodsky, chairwoman of Damayan. “With the global economic crisis, the number of migrants around the world is growing, and with that grows the Philippines’ dependence on remittances of overseas women workers. And on the demand side, the unprotected labor industry for domestic workers also breeds modern-day slavery. We need accountability from all governments, the enforcement of laws and the protection of women workers.”

Do not grant immunity to abusive diplomats
Nicole Hallett of the Community Development Project at the Urban Justice Center said it was unfortunate that the law often gives immunity to diplomats who commit heinous crimes such as forced labor and human trafficking. She said groups like Damayan hope to change the public discourse so that diplomats are held accountable, both in and out of the courtroom. Domestic workers from New York and Maryland, who have been abused by diplomats, also spoke at the protest. There were also cultural performances and readings of statements of support from by a variety of immigrant- and community-based organizations, lawyers and advocates.

Damayan called for the support of the Philippine consulate in the campaign, and demanded that the consulate create protocols to address the potential trafficking of Filipino domestic workers by diplomats. After the program at the Philippines consulate and mission, the workers marched to the Tanzanian, Kuwaiti and Mozambique missions. Advocates have long exposed Tanzania and Kuwait to the US State Department, with no concrete action. “We will work with all our allies and sister organizations to protect our workers and community,” Brodsky said. “We will continue to educate and organize to dismantle the structures that create modern-day slavery and to empower women who need to break free.”

Taiwanese official arrested for abusing Filipina housekeeper
In a related development, Taiwan is in an uproar over the arrest of a Taiwanese diplomat in Kansas City last November 11. Jacqueline Liu was arrested on charges of labor fraud. She has been accused of abusing her Filipina helper. Reports said there is a precedent of US judicial authorities’ issuing an arrest warrant for a Taiwanese official.

In a report from the Central News Agency, Taiwanese authorities are demanding the US government release Jacqueline Liu, the director-general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Kansas City. It said that Liu should be immediately and unconditionally released on the grounds that she enjoys immunity under a bilateral agreement on privileges, exemptions and immunities signed between the two countries in October 1980. Taiwanese politicians are outraged over how the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) made the arrest on the grounds that Taiwan is not a sovereign country and therefore its officials are not eligible for diplomatic immunity in the US.

Based on the FBI’s indictment against Liu, she has not just short-paid her housekeeper and abused the Filipina mentally and physically, but also has a record of maltreating a previous housemaid, leading to the maid suffering from depression and anorexia. The FBI’s main charge against Liu is her alleged violation of the criminal code regarding “fraud in foreign labor contracting.”

According to the indictment papers, a director-level official in Liu’s office was reported to have disclosed how the Filipina domestic worker was paid only $620 a month. In her contract, it was stated that she should be paid $1,240 per month. Another senior consular official, who had worked at the Kansas City office for more than two years was quoted as confirming that he was told by Liu to pay the maid only $220 every two weeks, plus $70 for grocery purchases — far below the contracted amount. It was also stated in the indictment papers that the Taiwanese official falsely brought the Filipina to her house on false pretenses. The indictment said the housekeeper was working about 100 hours a week.
A member of the Filipino Association of Greater Kansas City Jose Bayani was quoted in media reports saying that what was done to his compatriot was “literal enslavement.” Bayani said that during her errands to the grocery store, the Filipina told other Filipinos of her plight. A Filipino man heard her story and helped her escape from Liu’s home in late August. The housekeeper plans to stay in America to find another job. She is living in a shelter. Liu, is being held in the Johnson county jail until her next court appearance this week. The charges carry a possible five-year sentence in a federal jail. (http://bulatlat.com)

 ****************

Arroyo’s Labor Export Policy and the GFMD Promote Trafficking of Filipino Women –Women’s Party

PUBLISHED ON OCTOBER 24, 2008,
A women’s party list group scored the Arroyo government and the Global Forum for Migration and Development (GFMD) for the intensified trafficking of Filipino women and children.  To show their disgust for the Arroyo government and the GFMD, the Gabriela Women’s Party held a protest parade this morning at the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) in Pasay City. Gabriela Women’s Party’s Parade of Pinays for Export (PX),” highlighted the plight of Filipino women who were trafficked as mail order brides, domestic workers and caregivers, and prostituted women in countries such as the US, Singapore, Japan, Kuwait, and Canada, among others.  According to reports, some 300,000 to 400,000 Filipino women are victims of trafficking yearly. They are among the 12.3 million victims of forced labor or servitude worldwide.

The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) said that the Philippines belongs to the top five countries in the world with the most number of human trafficking victims, 80 percent of the victims are female minors. The DFA reported some 238 cases of trafficking in 2007, 212 of these are cases of sex trafficking in Singapore.

Cristina Palabay, Gabriela Women’s Party secretary general, said that Arroyo’s labor export policy ‘legitimizes the trafficking of our women and children to precarious and exploitative situations in host countries.’ ”Without jobs and livelihood within the Philippines, victims are lured, deceived and facilitated by profit-hungry syndicate recruiters and even government officials with promises of different jobs, good compensation, high wages and benefits,” Palabay said. Palabay disclosed that despite the enactment of the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act in 2003, there were only eight convictions involving 11 persons out of more than 200 cases filed in violation of the law.

Palabay also said that by highlighting the Philippine government as the role model among nations for exporting labor and by pursuing regular and protective forms of migration, ‘the GFMD’s role in the promotion of trafficking of women and children becomes clearer.’ Palabay said that with the generation of some $28 billion from the illegal industry of trafficking of women and children, the GFMD sees trafficking as a ‘profitable industry.’

The group will participate in the International Assembly of Migrants and Refugees (IAMR), a counter forum to the GFMD, on October 28 to 30. (Bulatlat.com)


Share/Bookmark