ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines—The government can’t prevent Filipino Muslims from flying to Mecca despite the high incidence of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) in Saudi Arabia, an official of the National Commission on Muslim Filipinos (NCMF) here said. In fact, it appears that the rise in cases of the deadly disease has not deterred Filipino Muslims at all, said Yaser Apion, NCMF head for Western Mindanao. According to Apion, some 2,500 applications for the annual Muslim hajj were filed in the NCMF regional office by June 30, the deadline for the special travel permits. Apion said there had been no advisory from the Saudi Ministry of Hajj to stop pilgrims from traveling to Mecca, which was why the NCMF had no basis for stopping Filipino Muslims from leaving the country. “We can only discourage them, especially those who are 65 years old and over and those not physically fit. We do not only dissuade the elderly from going to Mecca due to the MERS-CoV threat but also because of the physical rigors of the hajj,” he said on Thursday. In this Tuesday May, 13, 2014 file photo, Muslim pilgrims wear surgical masks to prevent infection from respiratory virus known as the Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) in the holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia. AP FILE PHOTO Apion said they made every elderly pilgrim understand that it was not obligatory for them to go on a hajj—one of the five pillars of Islam. Like other pilgrims, they were made Read More …
RODIL . ( PHOTO by Saajid Motala/Canadian Immigrant) Two Filipinos—social worker Alberto Rodil of Toronto, Ontario, and doctor Anna Wolak of Vancouver, British Columbia—were recently named among the Top 25 Canadian Immigrants for 2014, a prestigious contest organized by Canadian Immigrant magazine and sponsored by the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC). Now on its sixth year, the program serves “to uncover and celebrate the inspiring stories of Canadian immigrants who have made a significant contribution to Canada since their arrival,” the magazine explained. The contest drew over 630 nominations which were then reduced by a panel of judges to a shortlist of 75. The public was then asked to vote online to chose the year’s winners. Chevrolet was an associate sponsor. Rodil was awarded for his work in helping elderly immigrants as a settlement worker. Rodil, a former bank executive who holds a PhD in public administration from the Philippines, said he migrated “to give my children a better future.” But starting out in a new land in 2004 was difficult. He took on work as a sandwich maker, pizza maker, salad maker, dishwasher, cashier and cleaner. “I struggled a lot in Canada as an immigrant by doing low-level skilled work despite my strong educational preparation and more than 20 years of work experience in the Philippines but I became more focused, more assertive and more confident,” he is quoted as saying. Eventually, he went back to school, completing a social service worker diploma at George Brown College in 2009, Read More …
LOS ANGELES, California— Most elderly Filipino caregivers in the Los Angeles area work past retirement age due to the lack of employment protection and benefits, the inability to save up for retirement and the continuing need to provide financial help to their families, according to a policy report authored by three California-based researchers. “Can I Ever Retire? Making a Case for the ‘Retireable Wage’ of Elderly Caregivers in Los Angeles,” written by University of Southern California (USC) sociology department chair Rhacel Parreñas, University of California in San Francisco PhD candidate Jennifer Nazareno and USC PhD candidate Yu Kang Fan, is based on a 100-person survey of elderly Filipino caregivers in Los Angeles and supplemented with data from in-depth interviews and focus groups. The policy report was prepared with the cooperation of Pilipino Workers’ Center (PWC) and the University of California in Los Angeles Institute for Research on Labor and Employment. There are about 39.6 million people in the United States aged 65 and older, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services. The rapid increase of the aging population is expected to push that number up to 72.1 million by 2030 and therefore also push the demand for care giving. According to Parreñas, the researchers focused on elderly Filipino caregivers because many Filipinos are engaged in the home-care industry, but there was little information available on this segment of the workforce, such as sociodemographic patterns, migration histories, labor conditions, workplace characteristics and the needs and social concerns of Read More …
AMBASSADOR Daniele Bosio in a photo taken from the official website of the Italian Embassy in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. FILE PHOTO BIÑAN CITY—Members of an antihuman trafficking group on Friday stormed the regional trial court in this city to assail the court’s ruling that allowed the temporary release of Italian diplomat Daniele Bosio, who was arrested and detained for the alleged abuse and trafficking of three Filipino children. Members of the nongovernment End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of children for Sexual Purposes (Ecpat) held placards as they asked Judge Teodoro Solis of the Regional Trial Court Branch 25 to resign. “We are asking that the judge inhibit from the case and that the case be transferred to a court in Manila,” said Ecpat head Amihan Abueva. Bosio posted P900,000 in bail a day after Solis, on July 8, granted his petition for temporary release. Bosio, the Italian ambassador to Turkmenistan, was on a holiday when he was arrested on April 8 in a popular resort in this city. The arrest came after members of the child rights group Bahay Tuluyan Foundation was alarmed at seeing the 46-year-old Bosio with three boys who turned out to be street children from Caloocan City. Biñan City Prosecutor Agripino Baybay recommended charges of three counts of child abuse and three counts of human trafficking against Bosio. The diplomat was initially detained at the local detention facility but was later transferred to a private hospital in Makati City a month before his petition for Read More …
Deborah Toh (center, facing camera) getting a goodbye group hug from her classmates. Her three days at the Philippine school left such a huge impression that she has already asked to go back. ANN/Straits Times FILE PHOTO/TOH YONG CHUAN SINGAPORE—Like many parents, I sent my eight-year-old daughter Deborah for extra lessons during the June school holidays which end at the end of the month. But she didn’t attend an enrichment centre in Singapore; she spent three days at an elementary school in Cauayan city, a nine-hour drive north of the Philippine capital Manila. It came about after my daughter came home from school in early January asking why she did not get to go overseas during the December school holidays. “My classmates went skiing and to Disneyland,” she protested. Our family did not go away on holiday last December, but we have taken our children to Malaysia, Thailand and Japan previously. My wife and I were taken aback that children as young as eight were already comparing where they went for vacations. Worried about where this might lead, we wondered how to give our daughter a bit more perspective about life and holidays. Which was how we came up with the idea for a visit to the Philippines. Our resourceful Filipino maid Maricel, who lived in Cauayan before she came to work for our family eight years ago, arranged for Deborah to join her nine-year-old daughter Charelle at her school. Cauayan city has a population of just 122,000, according to Read More …
By Bong Lozada |INQUIRER.net 5:01 pm | Wednesday, July 9th, 2014 MANILA, Philippines—An official from the Department of National Defense assured that there are no Islamic Filipinos who joined Jihadist group Islamic State of Iraq and Al Sham. Speaking on condition of anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to media, the official said there are no validated reports that 200 Muslim Filipinos went to Iraq to join ISIS. He added that the figure of 200 Muslims are not Filipinos, but Australians. “We don’t have reports pertaining to that, there are no validated reports,” he said. “From what I heard there are 200 Australian Muslims fighting side-by-side with ISIS.” “The Filipinos we have there (Iraq and Syria) are overseas Filipino workers,” he explained. He added that Filipinos in Iraq are working in government facilities and are not fighting with the Jihadists. ISIS has plagued Iraq that resulted in the intra-Islam fighting in the country. Also, the Defense official said the 200 number is too far-fetched as he assured that the government is strictly monitoring Filipinos leaving for Iraq. RELATED STORY Crisis alert level 4 raised in Iraq, mandatory evacuation on Follow Us Other Stories: Indonesians vote for president in tight race What PH astronaut Chino Roque will bring to space Vigan among 21 finalists in 7 wonder cities race 7 Clark airport workers fired for pocketing ‘discounted’ travel tax Recent Stories: Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step Read More …
Indonesian presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto, center, talks to journalist after casting his ballot at a polling station at a polling station, Bojong Koneng in Bogor, Indonesia, Wednesday, July 9, 2014. AP JAKARTA — After the most polarizing campaign in Indonesia’s history, millions of people voted to elect a new president Wednesday in a race too tight to predict, hoping for change that will fight corruption and poverty. The world’s third-largest democracy is divided over two very different choices: Joko Widodo, a one-time furniture maker and Prabowo Subianto, a wealthy ex-army general with close links to former dictator Suharto. Just a couple of months ago, the election was considered firmly in favor of Widodo, who rose from humble beginnings to become the governor of Jakarta with a squeaky-clean political record. But a late surge by Subianto has vastly improved his chances after he wooed legions of supporters with calls for nationalism despite allegations of widespread human rights abuses during his military career and his connection with Suharto — his former father-in-law. Widodo’s appeal is that he is seen as a man of the people who wants to advance democratic reforms even though he lacks experience in national politics, and represents a break from the past as the first candidate in direct elections with no connection to the 1966-1998 Suharto-era and its excesses. When the polls opened Wednesday morning to about 190 million people, analysts predicted that undecided voters would determine the winner. The polls closed early in the afternoon, and preliminary Read More …
Taiwanese investigators look at a portion of a ship involved in the alleged shooting of a Taiwanese fisherman as they ride a rubber boat with the Philippine Coast Guard on Tuesday May 28, 2013. AP FILE PHOTO MANILA, Philippines—The Basco Batanes Regional Trial Court Branch 13 has scheduled the arraignment of the members of the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) personnel criminally charged for the death of Taiwanese fisherman Hung Shih cheng last year for July 7. Arraignment will still be in Batanes since the Supreme Court has yet to act on the PCG personnel’s bid to move the trial of the case in Manila. Scheduled for arraignment are accused Seaman 2nd class (SN2) Nicky Reynold Aurellio, SN1Edrando Quiapo Aguila, SN1 Mhelvyn Aguilar Bendo III, PO2 Richard Fernandez Corpuz, SN1 Andy Gibb Ronario Golfo, SN1 Sunny Galang Masangka, SN1 Henry Baco Solomon and Commanding Officer Arnold Enriquez de la Cruz they were charged for the fatal shooting of the fisherman after a sea chase and confrontation of the coast off Balintang Channel. They wanted to move the trial to Manila saying they are all based in Port Area, Manila, the office of the Philippine Coast Guard, and the incident happened in the performance of their duty. There was also an ill will between the PCG and the members of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources who are based in Region 2 after they were mentioned as those who coaxed them into tampering some of the evidence that led to the filing Read More …
By Nestor Corrales |INQUIRER.net 7:20 pm | Thursday, July 3rd, 2014 MANILA, Philippines—At least five militants linked to terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) and Abu Sayyaf were believed to be hiding in the “southern Philippines,” a Malaysian online publication said. The STAR online said five terrorists were believed to be hiding in Mindanao according to Malaysian police. The report identified the terrorists as Dr. Mahmud Ahmad, Mohd Najib Husen, Muhammad Joraimee Awang Raimee, Mohd Amin Baco, and Jeknal Adil. It said the group is believed to be responsible for recruiting and arranging for four Malaysians sent to Syria on March 5 this year, including Ahmad Tarmimi Maliki, the first Malaysian suicide bomber. The report quoted a source saying that Baco and Adil had trained with Abu Sayyaf and have now joined the secessionist group in the southern Philippines. RELATED STORIES Officials: Syrian suicide bomber was an American UN: 5.5 million Syrian children affected by war Follow Us Other Stories: Batanes Court schedules arraignment of PCG men for July 7 Travellers to US face tighter airport security Australian surgeons remove huge growth from Filipino boy’s face Filipino Muslims urged to abort Mecca trip due to MERS virus Recent Stories: Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines. Short URL: http://globalnation.inquirer.net/?p=107532 Factual errors? Contact Read More …
By Nestor Corrales |INQUIRER.net 3:49 pm | Wednesday, July 2nd, 2014 Loading the player… Video from Associated Press MANILA, Philippines—An American teenager attempting to become the youngest person ever to fly around the world solo arrived in Manila on Tuesday. Matt Guthmiller, a 19-year-old native of South Dakota in the United States, is on a moth-long mission to travel around the world. Guthmiller said he wants to inspire others. “If you have a big idea, just go out and figure out how to do it,” he said. His itinerary includes 25 stops in 14 countries in five continents and he is raising funds to donate to charity. RELATED STORIES Armless Fil-Am pilot in Philippines Pilot’s planes often used for charity trips Follow Us Other Stories: Filipinos in West Africa warned as DFA raises alert level 2 over Ebola outbreak New York police asks public for leads on fatal assault on Filipino man China media slam Japan’s move to expand military role South Korean, 20 others hurt as bus falls into ravine Recent Stories: Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines. Short URL: http://globalnation.inquirer.net/?p=107461 Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer’s day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer’s Reader’s Advocate. Or write The Readers’ Advocate: c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer Chino Roces Avenue Read More …