Sun.Star Pampanga

Over 400K displaced OFWs repatriate­d--- DOLE

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MANILA Over400,000oversea­sFilipinow­ork ers (OFWs) displaced by the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic have so far been repatriate­d to the country, the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) said on Wednesday.

“As of today, 420,000 want to come home and we were able to send we understand them,” back to the country. We Labor Secretary Silvestre have some 200,000 left. Bello III said in a virtual There are those who signify briefing. that they do not Bello added that they expect around 60,000 more OFWs to come home this year.

Asked why some OFWs opted not to return home, Bello said some countries have an unemployme­nt insurance program that also covers displaced migrant workers while others have already rolled out their vaccinatio­n program against the Covid19.

“The benefits of insurance in some European countries will last for one year. So, even if they have been displaced they have benefits under the unemployme­nt insurance. So, they did not manifest intention to come home,” he said. “Many of them are from the Middle East since they have been vaccinated.”

Meanwhile, Bello said there are still enough funds for the repatriati­on of displaced OFWs.

“The President has given us PHP5 billion. We have not spent it all,” he said.

Bello said returning overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) will only stay in quarantine facilities in Metro Manila for only five days and would be endorsed to their respective local government units (LGU) once they test negative for Covid19 to undergo an additional nine days of quarantine.

“But, when you arrived at your LGU destinatio­n, you will be quarantine­d for nine days, it should be 14 days. It was divided, five days in Metro Manila. Swabbing after five days, if negative, you are allowed to go to your final destinatio­n. After that 14 days, you are allowed...free to go to where you want,” Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III.

Bello, meanwhile, assure that there are enough facilities to accommodat­e the arriving OFWs.

“We can accommodat­e them. There’s no problem regarding quarantine accommodat­ion. Even when the quarantine period is 14 days we have sufficient quarantine accommodat­ion," he said.

On Wednesday, Presidenti­al Spokespers­on Harry Roque said the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) approved the new testing protocol where travelers entering the Philippine­s would be required to undergo reverse transcript­ionpolymer­ase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing five days after their arrival in the country starting Feb. 1. (PNA)

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