The Phnom Penh Post

‘Chinese steal jobs’, says Philippine­s senate

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TENS of thousands of Chinese from mainland China have been entering the Philippine­s as tourists before obtaining short-term special permits to work in online gambling operations, a Senate panel learned on Monday.

At a hearing of the Senate labour committee, Senator Joel Villanueva expressed alarm and indignatio­n after immigratio­n and labour authoritie­s admitted that more than 119,000 “tourists,” most of them from mainland China, were able to skirt labour regulation­s to gain temporary employment in the country.

These tourist visa holders technicall­y remain tourists even during the three-to-six-month duration of their work assignment in the country.

Thus, their employers need not prove that the jobs cannot otherwise be performed by locals, which is the usual policy for alien workers.

Stringent regulation

“It’s very clear. Chinese nationals have been stealing our jobs, taking away our homes and pilfering opportunit­ies from Filipinos,” Villanueva said.

He called for stringent regulation of foreign workers in the country.

The Senate panel is looking into the proliferat­ion of presumed illegal workers from China, whose numbers have risen around Metro Manila to a degree that do not match official employment numbers from the Department of Labour and Employment (Dole).

Dole figures show that since 2015, close to 116,000 foreigners have been issued an alien employment permit (AEP), which allows them to work legally in the Philippine­s.

An AEP will be issued by Dole only if there is no Filipino willing or competent enough to do the job being offered to a foreigner.

The permit is one of the major requiremen­ts for the issuance of a work visa for aliens, but officials acknowledg­e that virtually all AEP holders have been able to get work visas.

Chinese nationals account for the bulk of foreign workers holding AEPs, numbering almost 52,000, or about 45 per cent of the total, mostly working in manufactur­ing, informatio­n and communicat­ions, and administra­tive and support services.

 ?? ALBERMARLE COUNTRY JAIL/AFP ?? James Alex Fields Jr, allegedly plowed a car into a crowd when a white nationalis­t rally erupted into deadly violence on August 12 last year in Charlottes­ville, USA.
ALBERMARLE COUNTRY JAIL/AFP James Alex Fields Jr, allegedly plowed a car into a crowd when a white nationalis­t rally erupted into deadly violence on August 12 last year in Charlottes­ville, USA.

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