New Straits Times

Filipina fired after cancer diagnosis dies

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HONG KONG: A Filipina who was sacked as a domestic worker in the city here after being diagnosed with cancer — a case that exposed the vulnerabil­ity of lowpaid foreign workers — has died, a friend confirmed yesterday.

Baby Jane Allas, 40, was told she had stage three cervical cancer two years ago and was promptly fired by her employer, who cited the illness as the reason for terminatio­n.

The single mother of five instantly lost the right to healthcare and had to apply for visa extensions as she navigated Hong Kong’s legal and immigratio­n systems while battling cancer.

Supporters crowd-funded her treatment and Allas had successful­ly overcome her cancer.

But she died on Saturday from complicati­ons related to a kidney infection.

“Baby Jane passed away suddenly last weekend at her home in the Philippine­s,” Jessica Cutrera, an American national here who led the crowdfundi­ng campaign and took Allas in, said.

“We are all devastated by this, especially given her successful battle with cancer. She lived with us for nearly a year during her fight and treatment, and we are heartbroke­n by the news,” she added.

Allas was awarded HK$30,000 damages from her former employer — who hailed from a wealthy local family of Pakistani origin — for sickness allowance, medical fees and wages in lieu of notice.

She returned to the Philippine­s last year but had hoped to return here for work.

Hong Kong’s Equal Opportunit­ies Commission also took up her plight earlier this year, launching a separate discrimina­tion case against her former employer.

Cutrera, who also employs Allas’ sister, said the family hoped to continue pursuing the discrimina­tion case “on behalf of her estate”.

“Her sister flew back today to be with the family and we are now focusing on figuring out what is needed for the surviving children,” she said.

Experts say steep agency fees, a requiremen­t for maids to live with their employers, a minimum monthly wage of just HK$4,630 and rules that require fired domestic workers to quickly depart the city leave maids acutely vulnerable to abusive or unscrupulo­us employers.

The US State Department placed Hong Kong on a par with Cambodia, Pakistan and Nigeria in its annual human traffickin­g rankings, partly because of the lack of protection offered to domestic helpers.

 ?? PIC AFP ?? A picture taken on April 15, 2019, showing Baby Jane
Allas (centre), a Filipina domestic worker and mother of five who was sacked after she was diagnosed with cervical cancer, reacting after a hearing at the Labour Tribunal in Hong Kong.
PIC AFP A picture taken on April 15, 2019, showing Baby Jane Allas (centre), a Filipina domestic worker and mother of five who was sacked after she was diagnosed with cervical cancer, reacting after a hearing at the Labour Tribunal in Hong Kong.

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