Philippine Daily Inquirer

Demafelis kin: I’m no illegal recruiter

- —STORY BY JEANNETTE I. ANDRADE

A distant relative of murdered Filipino maid Joanna Demafelis surfaced on Thursday to clear herself of liability for her death. Agnes Tuballes denied being an illegal recruiter, insisting she had simply recommende­d Demafelis to a labor recruitmen­t agency for employment in Kuwait. “I came out to correct the irresponsi­ble news report that I am an illegal recruiter,” she said.

A distant relative who had referred murdered Filipino maid Joanna Demafelis to a labor recruitmen­t agency for employment in Kuwait surfaced on Thursday to clear herself of liability for her death.

Agnes Tuballes denied being an illegal recruiter, as she had been reported to be, and said that the disclosure of her identity in the press and on social media had made her a target of bullying.

In a press conference at the Philippine National Police Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group (PNP-CIDG) headquarte­rs in Camp Crame, Quezon City, Tuballes said in Filipino: “I came out to correct the irresponsi­ble news report that I am an illegal recruiter. Its impact on me is like I was the suspect [in the killing]. You could have gotten my side before airing that.”

Bullied on social media

She claimed that since the news came out, she and her two kids had been subjected to bullying on social networking sites.

“I am not the suspect but it appeared I was the prime suspect. I did not kill Joanna [and you cannot] just use my picture without permission,” Tuballes said, adding that her children were suffering from the media attention.

“I am a single mother. I have been an [overseas worker] since 2013. I worked as a domestic helper. I never wanted Joanna to die there (Kuwait). I never dreamed of endangerin­g anybody,” she said.

She told reporters that she had simply recommende­d Demafelis for overseas employment to the recruitmen­t agency, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Global E-Human Resources.

“I did not kill Joanna. I only helped her work legally abroad. I referred her to a legal agency. I never thought she would get killed there,” she said.

At the Department of Labor and Employment, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III presented to reporters Marissa Ansaji Mohammad, who processed Demafelis’ papers at Mt. Carmel Global in 2014.

Mohammad said she voluntaril­y surfaced to clear her name, stressing that she had nothing to do with Demafelis’ deployment to Kuwait.

Mt. Carmel officers

She said she was only a trainee in the agency at the time and her job was “to give applicants applicatio­n forms.”

Mohammad said she worked in the agency for only a year.

Bello said there were two or three other persons of in- terest in Demafelis’ case but he was not allowed to name them.

Two officers of Mt. Carmel Global are expected to show up at the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) headquarte­rs on Friday.

Cesar Bacani, chief of the NBI-National Capital Region, said Adrian Briones, president, and Mary Gay Abrasina, assistant general manager, of Mt. Carmel Global had been summoned to the NBI for questionin­g.

Labor Undersecre­tary Claro Arellano said the Kuwait government was willing to negotiate an agreement with the Philippine government for the protection of Filipinos in the Gulf state.

“Kuwaiti delegates are expected to arrive in Manila next week,” Arellano said.

The death of Demafelis, whose body was discovered stuffed in a freezer in an abandoned flat in Kuwait City last Feb. 7, prompted President Duterte to ban new labor traffic to Kuwait until the Kuwait government agreed to regulating working conditions for Filipinos.

He also authorized a repatriati­on program, under which 1,700 distressed Filipinos had returned from Kuwait on free flights.

At the PNP headquarte­rs, Director Roel Obusan, the CIDG chief, told reporters that his command, in presenting Tuballes to the press, was providing her a platform to clear her name.

Not a suspect

“We are presenting her not as a suspect because our case buildup is not yet complete. But for the purposes of giving the truth to the public, this is already a very sensationa­l case, and with her submission that she needs to speak out so the people would know her participat­ion in [Joanna’s deployment to] Kuwait,” Obusan said.

Tuballes said she did not recruit Demafelis. Instead, it was Demafelis who asked her to help her find work in another country.

“I recommende­d, referred her to Our Lady of Mt. Carmel. I told her to apply there because passport was free, there was no placement fee and no salary deduction … She was able to work overseas for free and legally,” she said.

Tuballes claimed that she made referrals and got P5,000 in commission from the recruitmen­t agency for every applicant she recommende­d.

She said she herself was an overseas worker during the time that Demafelis submitted her applicatio­n to Mt. Carmel. She was paid P13,000 for referring Demafelis to the company.

 ??  ??
 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? ILLEGAL RECRUITMEN­T DENIED Agnes Tuballes shows up at the Philippine National Police Criminal Detection and Investigat­ion Group office in Camp Crame to deny charges that she recruited Joanna Demafelis.
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ILLEGAL RECRUITMEN­T DENIED Agnes Tuballes shows up at the Philippine National Police Criminal Detection and Investigat­ion Group office in Camp Crame to deny charges that she recruited Joanna Demafelis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines