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Filipina claiming torture by 'NPA husband' loses bid to oppose deportation

Posted on 11 December 2023 No comments

 

The High Court upheld the Board's decision denying the Filipina's claim of possible torture

A Filipina who overstayed her visa after first working as a domestic helper in Hong Kong and China, and then coming back as a visitor, lost her bid to challenge the decision of the Immigration Director and the Torture Claims Adjudication rejecting her application against being sent back home.

In her application for a judicial review, Sheryll Seva Vicente, 37 years old, alleged that the TCAB and the Director were wrong in denying her claim against non-refoulement on the basis that if sent back, she would be harmed by her estranged husband who is affiliated with the armed rebel group, the New People’s Army.

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Vicente, now 37 years old, first came to Hong Kong on Aug 17, 2010 to work as a domestic helper, but was terminated only after two months. She left Hong Kong for the Mainland but returned to Hong Kong twice to take up a job as a domestic helper, ultimately leading to a third termination on May 4, 2012.

She duly left Hong Kong for Macau on Jul 10, 2012 and re-entered Hong Kong on Jul 27 that year as a visitor. She was allowed to remain until Aug. 3, 2012 but overstayed until her surrender to authorities on Jul 26, 2017.

DETALYE

Vicente claimed that she is a Catholic but due to a family arrangement, she was made to wed her Muslim husband in 2006. They had two children and lived together in Sultan Kudarat.

She further claimed that her husband was abusive and would often beat her up when he was drunk. One day in November 2006, while she was pregnant, her husband allegedly beat her up so badly that she suffered bruises and scratches which took several months to heal.

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Between then and until February 2010 he allegedly attacked her about two to three times a week and even sexually abused her. When she asked for a separation, her husband reportedly pointed both a pistol and a rifle at her and threatened to kill her, her parents and their children.

Vicente said she left for Manila in February 2010 to apply for a job abroad and in August of the same year, managed to leave for Hong Kong.

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Even after her departure she said her husband continued to harass her parents’ family and even threatened her through her mother, with the latest being in October 2018.

Vicente said she did not divorce her husband because of her Catholic faith and that even if she tried to separate from him and relocated within the country he would still be able to track her through his NPA network.

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Further, she said she did not believe there was adequate state protection in the Philippines, particularly for female victims of domestic violence. She also fears for the safety of her parents’ family and children if she made a report to local authorities.

On Jun 13, 2018, she applied for non-refoulement based on these grounds. Her claim was duly processed based on the grounds of torture, persecution, and possible violation of her rights under Hong Kong’s Bill of Rights. But on Nov. 1, 2018, the Director dismissed her claim and this was affirmed by the TCAB on May 30, 2019.

According to the Board, Vicente gave statements that “that kept evolving in the course of her testimony.” As an example, she gave two different versions of how she got to Manila to apply for overseas work during her written application and screening application.

She was also found to have given evasive and unconvincing answers as to how she managed to survive living in Hong Kong for seven years without a job, and why she sued her employment agency in 2012 which she cited as ground for applying for a visa extension.

Most significantly, the Board pointed out that when asked why she did not immediately surrender to the authorities when she became an overstayer in 2012 and only asked for protection in 2017, she said it was because the Immigration Department did not give her such an advice.

“The Board did not accept that as a reasonable explanation and considered her failure to promptly seek protection as a factor damaging her credibility,” said the High Court in its judgment.

Neither did the Board believe her other claims about marrying a Muslim man despite remaining a devout Catholic herself, and while she allowed her children to be raised as Muslims.

Vicente was found to have given vague responses about her supposedly Muslim marriage, and how her husband practiced Islam in his daily life.

“The Board found her evidence on this issue “was, at best, general and simplistic and did not reveal…an intimate understand[ing] of daily Islamic practices which might be expected from a woman who shared her daily married life with a Muslim man for around four years,” said the judgment.

She also failed to provide convincing proof of her husband’s alleged connection with the NPA, merely citing as basis a locked box in his possession which she said contained several mobile phones, wiring and guns.

It was only when the Board told her that those items did not by themselves link her husband to the NPA that she added that she heard his affiliation to the rebel group from men talking in their house. When pressed further, she said the men were talking about planting a bomb.

“The Board considered she was making up her evidence as she went along,” said the judgment.

Having disregarded her claim of alleged threats from her husband, the Board decided to uphold the Director’s decision denying her claim against non-refoulement.

The High Court said that having found no errors of law, procedural unfairness or unreasonableness in the Board and Director’s decisions denying Vicente’s application, it could only uphold those judgments.

“ The function of the court in judicial review is not to re-assess the non-refoulement claims afresh. The primary decision-makers in a claim for non-refoulement are the Director and the Board. They alone assess the evidence and find facts including those relating to the matters allegedly giving rise to the non-refoulement claim, risk of harm, availability of state protection and viability of internal relocation, said the Court.

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Filipina avoids jail after pleading guilty to shoplifting

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A Filipina narrowly evaded jail today after she admitted shoplifting $105 worth of items from a Wellcome supermarket in Mong Kok on Oct. 14.

A. C. Pascual, 31 years old, was penalized with two months’ imprisonment, suspended for three years, which would keep her out of jail if she does not commit any offense within the next three years.

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Principal Magistrate Don So handed down the penalty when Pascual, who is unemployed, appeared before him in a hearing at West Kowloon court.

DETALYE

Pascual was accused of stealing three bottled drinks, three packs of candy, three packs of almonds, one box of cotton swabs and a bottle of sterilizing spray, worth a total of $105 and owned by The Dairy Farm Company Ltd.

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Meanwhile, in a separate case at Kowloon City Court, another Filipina was remanded in jail custody after her drug trafficking case was adjourned to Jan. 18 by Acting Principal Magistrate Veronica Heung for committal proceedings at the Eastern Court.

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Rhea Nerissa Maristela, 27 years old and a permanent resident, is charged with traficking in dangerous drugs along with a Pakistani asylum-seeker, Rizhwan Muhammad, 35 years old.

The two were arrested by police on April 27 inside the Toronto Holidays Guesthouse on Jordan Road, Yau Ma Tei.

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Seized from them were 168 grams of 3,4 methylenedioxy methamphetamine and 657.4 grams of methamphetamine hydrochloride or shabu.


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29 people arrested in latest operations against illegal workers

Posted on 10 December 2023 No comments

 

Immigration officers escort one of those arrested to the van that took them to prison

Four Immigration and police operations against illegal workers last week netted 29 people -- 24 suspected illegal workers, four employers and one aider and abettor.

Those arrested were investigated and should face court proceedings starting this week.

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The arrests were made during Immigration Department (ImmD) operations codenamed "Fastrack", "Lightshadow" and "Twilight", and joint operations with the Hong Kong Police Force codenamed "Windsand" from December 4 to December 7.

ImmD Task Force officers raided 56 target locations including industrial buildings, massage parlors, premises under renovation, recycling yards, residential buildings and restaurants.

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Twenty-one suspected illegal workers, four suspected employers and one suspected aider and abettor were arrested.

The arrested workers comprised five men and 16 women, aged 27 to 54.

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Among them, two men and four women were holders of recognisance forms, indicating that they are asylum seekers, which prohibit them from taking any employment.

Three men and one woman, aged 46 to 57, were suspected of employing the illegal workers and were also arrested.

DETALYE

One woman, aged 39, who was suspected of aiding and abetting a person who breached the condition of stay in Hong Kong, was also arrested.

Police officers in operation "Windsand" arrested two male and one female Mainland visitors, aged 39 and 56, for breaching their conditions of stay by being involved in suspected parallel trading activities at Po Wan Road and San Wan Road in Sheung Shui district.

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The goods mainly included cosmetics products, daily necessities and health care products.

Under the Immigration Ordinance, visitors are not allowed to take employment in Hong Kong, whether paid or unpaid, without permission of the Director of Immigration. Offenders face a maximum fine of $50,000 and up to two years' imprisonment.

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“Aiders and abettors are also liable to prosecution and penalties," ImmD said.

 Also prohibited from taking any emloyment is any person who is the subject of a removal or deportation order, an overstayer or a person refused permission to land.

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“Offenders are liable upon conviction to a maximum fine of $50,000 and up to three years' imprisonment," ImmD addded.

 The penalties are for those employing illegal workers -- up to $500,000 fine and up to 10 years' imprisonment. 

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CG bids UPAA HK goodbye as tour of duty set to end this month

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UPAA-HK members in a farewell toast to Congen Raly Tejada

Consul General Raly Tejada gave what was probably his first farewell speech to a Filipino community group last Saturday night, during the annual general meeting and Christmas party of the University of the Philippines Alumni Association in Hong Kong.

CG Tejada said he will end his six-year overseas tour of duty at the end of this month, the last four years of which he spent in Hong Kong. For the first two years, 2017 to 2019, he served as the Philippine consul general in Malaysia.

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He will move back to the Department of Foreign Affairs office in Manila, where he will serve as assistant secretary in  charge of the legal division. His Hong Kong post, meanwhile, will be taken over by his current deputy and fellow lawyer Germinia Usudan.

Tejada served during what was easily one of the most turbulent periods in Hong Kong’s  history. He arrived in December 2019, just as the massive anti-government protests were peaking, then spent the next three years leading the community through the Covid-19 pandemic.

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Three years ng pandemic, napakahirap talaga,” (Three years of the pandemic, that was really tough) he told his fellow UP alumni during the gathering.

But nevertheless, he said he was happy that he received a lot of support from various groups and individuals during those difficult years, including members of the UPAA-HK.

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“I always look to UP for inspiration and guidance,” he added.

Tejada recalls the difficulty of leading the community through the pandemic

Tejada went to UP for his undergraduate course and also part of his law studies, before eventually moving to San Sebastian College where he obtained his Juris Doctor degree in 1998. He is currently working on his master of public management degree at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

During his term, Tejada graced several events hosted by UPAA HK, with the last being the Christmas party they had two years ago at a venue tucked away in a rundown building in Causeway Bay, amid some of the most severe pandemic restrictions imposed by HK.

DETALYE

But in the same year, UPAA-HK turned over more than Php200,000 to the Philippine General Hospital in the Philippine to help protect medical frontliners there, and  to honor the late Ambassador Bernardita Catalla, a former congen in HK who died of Covid-19 while serving in Lebanon.

During last year’s overseas voting in the country’s presidential election, UPAA HK officers were among those who signed up to help control the huge crowds that poured into the polling centre at Bayanihan Centre in Kennedy Town.

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Through the years, and even during the pandemic, the group has donated money it raised from various events to several charities, in particular the Bethune House Migrant Women’s Refuge which is run by one of its members, Edwina Antonio.

The outgoing CG administering the oath to the incoming officers led by Turingan (leftmost)

This year, Tejada again administered the oath of office to the newly elected officers of the UPAA-HK: Maritess Turingan, president; Rey Oliver Fabros, vice-president; Jennifer Madarang, secretary; Marie Abigail Perez, treasurer; Jad de Guzman, auditor; and Elaine Grace Bauto, PRO.

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Immediately after the event, Turingan asked members to fill out a survey form to help the new officers decide on the activities and projects they will undertake in 2024, the 20th year since the organization was founded.

A quiz show on entertainment, general trivia and anything related to UP livened up the party, along with an exchange of gifts and a sumptuous dinner.

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(Watch out for The SUN Hong Kong's exit interview with Congen Tejada later this month).

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Another ‘lost’ Filipina being sought by relatives

Posted on 09 December 2023 No comments

 

Photo taken last month shows Margarita loitering in Chung King Mansions in TST

The family of a Filipina recognizance paper holder is asking for help in locating her, after photos emerged of her scavenging, and apparently not of sound mind.

According to a daughter of Margarita G. who was last seen wandering around Tsim Sha Tsui on Nov. 12, barefoot and looking emaciated, her mother stopped communicating with them after being released from jail for overstaying in 2019.

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Last she heard, the daughter, Carol, said her mother had been evicted from her shared flat in Harilela Mansion on Nathan Road, Tsim Sha Tsui in October.

Baka po may nakakita sa mama ko na pagala-gala sa Hong Kong,” said Carol. “Namumulot daw ng basura kung saan-saan…Kahit tissue na gamit daw po pupulutin pa nya at sasabihin daw niya na pwede pa po.”

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(Someone might have seen my mother wandering around Hong Kong. She reportedly picks up trash everywhere. She picks up even used tissue paper, saying they could still be reused).

Carol said her mother, who is now 44 years old, separated from her father when she was still very little, and had been the sole breadwinner for her and her older brother.

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Margarita first came to Hong Kong in 2009 and had been going home every two years until her contract was terminated and she decided to overstay.

She was arrested and jailed in 2018 and was released the next year, during which she decided to file a claim against non-refoulement, or against being sent back to the Philippines. She stopped communicating with her children after that.

DETALYE

For some reason she was not clear about, Carol said her mother became depressed afterwards,  leading to her current mental state.

Photo of a comely Margarita taken before her apparent mental breakdown

Carol said she and her brother had reached out to the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration in the Philippines for help in getting their mother repatriated, but they have yet to get an update on their appeal.

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The only information they have received since losing touch with her came from the Pakistani friend of a friend of  their mother, who also sent them her photo taken last Nov. 12.

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Carol is begging anyone who has spotted her mother to report immediately to the police and communicate with OWWA in Hong Kong, as they have also been alerted about her case. She said she just wants her mother brought home to safety to their hometown of Santiago, Isabela.

OWWA HK’s hotline is 6345 9324.

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Alternatively, people who know Margarita’s whereabouts can message us here at The SUN and we will forward the information to the Consulate and to Carol.

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