The Manila Times

THE RISE OF ‘LEGAL TRAFFICKIN­G’

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VERYONE knows that the words go together. These are two contradict­ory terms when taken literally. An oxymoron, as my former English teacher would call it. But I coined describe the phenomenon—which of late appears to be happening more frequently—of legal Filipino migrant - national borders.

- ing meant abducting people on the street and transporti­ng them to different countries for prostituti­on, slave labor and the like. Nowadays, particular­ly migrant workers with legal and valid residency permits and working papers, who are ferried from their lawful workplace in one country and brought to—and legally enter—another country in order to be exploited.

Two months ago, the British broadsheet The Guardian published a story of Evelyn, a Filipino domestic worker in Qatar who was brought to the United Kingdom where she faced abuse worse than those commonly reported in the Middle East.

According to the report, “the in Kensington, where her boss, the sister of her ‘madam’ in Qatar, made her work 20 hours a day, allowing her only one piece of bread and no wages. She was trapped in a life of servitude, while meters away central London bustled with shoppers.”

when we reached Heathrow, the employer what I’d be doing and let us Harrods. I had to work all the time, without a day off, and I slept on the saying I was stupid or calling me a ‘dog’ in Arabic. I was rarely allowed outside the house, and only with her. I was given just a piece of bread and cup of tea for the whole day. I became emaciated…,” Elvira narrated.

Elvira was only able to escape when while her Qatari employer was taking a nap one day, she man and ran away.

Another domestic worker, whom we shall call “Miranda,” also experi - tive of South Cotabato, Miranda was hired to work as a domestic worker in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Everything seemed to work out well with her Saudi employer. When summer came, her employer’s family went to Dubai for a vacation and brought her along.

While in Dubai, she was allegedly ‘sold’ to her employer’s business partner. As Miranda understood it, she was offered as a sort of ‘present’ to seal her employer’s business deal with his Dubai partner. Eventually, her new Emirati employer ‘ lent’ Miranda to his relatives and she was made to service two other households. Despite being overworked, she did not think of complainin­g as she continued to receive her salary.

However, the time came when one of her Emirati employer’s relatives tried to sexually molest her. After Phil in Dubai rescued Miranda, they discovered that her original foreign recruitmen­t agency was based in Riyadh. Having no valid work papers or residence permit in Dubai, Miranda’s case was elevated to the Assistance­to-Nationals Section (ANS) of the Philippine consulate in the Emirati state so that she could be eventually repatriate­d to the Philippine­s using diplomatic channels.

But it is not only in the Gulf countries that legal traffickin­g is becoming a common occurrence. It’s also happening within our neighborho­od in Southeast Asia.

Last month, the South China Morning Post wrote about the appeal of our Philippine consulate for the Hong Kong government to crack down on local employers breaking the law by taking their domestic helpers to work in mainland China. This after Lorain Asuncion, a Filipino domestic helper, fell to her death from a building in Shenzhen in July after allegedly being sent by her Hong Kong employers to work at a relative’s house.

Hong Kong’s immigratio­n authoritie­s have referred Asuncion’s death to police as a “suspected Kong police arrested and only charged her Hong Kong employers for conspiracy to defraud.

“Rights groups said Asuncion’s case highlighte­d a ‘dangerous trend’—that has become prevalent in recent years —of employers breaching contracts by taking their helpers to work outside Hong Kong,” South China Morning Post wrote.

To address the scourge of legal H. Bello 3rd has instructed all POLOs in some 35 posts around the world to keep an eye on the deployment of overseas Filipino workers in their respective jurisdicti­ons. He has also instructed the Philippine Overseas Employment Administra­tion (POEA) to strictly enforce the rules and regulation­s requiring all Philippine recruitmen­t agencies to closely monitor the condition of the workers they deploy.

But even our government’s best efforts will not eradicate this grow to detect, let alone eradicate completely. It is a criminal phenomenon transcendi­ng internatio­nal borders and transgress­ing the laws of several countries. There will surely be other Evelyns, Mirandas and Lorains unless countries get together to combat the illegal transport of migrant workers across borders.

The problem, however, is that most nations as an immigratio­n issue rather than a transnatio­nal concern. This is why the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) Committee on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Migrant Workers (ACMW) is currently putting together an instrument to tackle this new phenomenon.

In a recent Asean consultati­on workshop in Yogyagarta, Indonesia, which I attended as ACMW representa­tive, we mapped out the different ways various state agencies in the region can prevent traffickin­g-in We all realize, however, that much more work remains to be done.

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