Philippine Daily Inquirer

Cautionary words for migrants to New Zealand

- —DENNISMAGA, national coordinato­r, Migrante Aotearoa NZ, migrante-aotearoa.org.nz

OUR FILIPINO community group, Migrante Aotearoa, recently met with Filipinos at St. Ninians Presbyteri­an Church Lounge in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, to discuss work conditions, union issues and workers’ rights.

It’s distressin­g to hear that a growing number of Filipinos who came to New Zealand on student visas and took up a course in Business Management now find themselves in limbo. Many of them can’t find their dream jobs and their visas are about to expire.

We hope that the 100 young Filipinos who wish to come to New Zealand through the new Working Holiday scheme won’t be victimized by those who give false promises of long-term jobs, easy life and New Zealand residency to the extent of disposing of all their assets in the Philippine­s. What most recruiters won’t tell Filipinos back home is that the living cost in New Zealand is very high, and the country has yet to recover from unemployme­nt heights that the 2008 recession pushed it up to.

New migrants often fall prey to misinforma­tion about working and living in New Zealand. Several reports made by New Zealand government agencies such as the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment say new migrant workers are exploited at work, are charged exorbitant fees and end up unemployed. Some of the Filipino workers attracted to work in Christchur­ch have also fallen victim to “job scams” that promise them entry to New Zealand upon payment of exorbitant fees.

Since the February 2011 earthquake that brought destructio­n to Christchur­ch and the subsequent demolition­s that further stripped the city of more buildings, constructi­on companies have sought skilled workers from overseas. A significan­t number of workers—as many as 17,000 of the 35,000 workers needed for Christchur­ch to rebuild—are expected to come from overseas.

Migrante Aotearoa enjoins Filipinos already in New Zealand to join unions and actively support the Living Wage campaign in order to get paid enough to meet their daily needs in New Zealand. Currently, 90,500 New Zealanders are being paid the minimum wage of $13.75/hour.

Filipinos stand to benefit if the Living Wage of $18.40 is adopted nationwide. Filipinos and other migrants, along with Maori, Pacific peoples, youth and disabled people, are among those who receive low wages.

Migrante Aotearoa, a member of the global alliance Migrante Internatio­nal, is at the forefront of migrant Filipino campaigns and struggles, building awareness of and concern for the plight of poor and marginaliz­ed Filipinos at home and abroad, asserting their welfare and promoting their holistic developmen­t. Migrante chapters worldwide are campaignin­g against abuses in workplaces, policies and regulation­s that exploit and oppressmig­rant workers, and various immigratio­n and employment-related issues affecting Filipinos and fellow migrants.

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 ?? LEO M. SABANGAN II ?? AT THE Edsa Shrine the other day, protesters denounced the Cybercrime Law.
LEO M. SABANGAN II AT THE Edsa Shrine the other day, protesters denounced the Cybercrime Law.

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