Sun.Star Pampanga

22 trafficked Pinoys from Syria homeafter ‘lengthy’negotiatio­ns

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– Twenty-two Filipino traffickin­g and illegal recruitmen­t victims were repatriate­d from Syria after "lengthy diplomatic negotiatio­ns" with the Syrian government, the Philippine Embassy in Damascus said Saturday.

"For the first time in history, the Filipino Workers Resource Center (FWRC) Shelter of the Embassy shall be fully emptied out of all the wards -- they just landed at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport on 26 June 2021," it said in a statement.

The embassy said cases have also been filed against the victim's recruiters and human trafficker­s, under the helm of Chargé d'Affaires Vida Soraya Verzosa.

“Sa wakas, uuwi na po kami. Akala namin wala na kaming pag-asa makauwi pero salamat po sa DFA at sa Philippine Embassy sa Syria (At last, we are coming home. We already lost hope that we can be repatriate­d but we are thankful to the Department of Foreign Affairs and to the Philippine Embassy in Syria)," one of the wards told the Embassy, after recalling that they were in the shelter for nearly three years due to the difficulti­es in securing their exit visas from the employers and the recruitmen­t agenci es.

The Embassy did not name the Filipina.

The successful repatriati­on is the fulfillmen­t of the marching orders of Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. last January 26, where he said: “I am emptying the shelters of all wards -- no later than next flight out; sending a team to do it. It won’t happen again.”

READ: Locsin vows to repatriate distressed Pinoys in Syria

Verzosa requested in her previous meetings that a presidenti­al pardon be granted to the Filipinas so they will no longer be liable for their cases, i.e. false charges of theft. Following these negotiatio­ns, the embassy said the processing of their exit visas was expedited.

The envoy, for her part, thanked the Immigratio­n Department under the Ministry of Interior of Syria, saying their assistance "is akin to a gift from Syria to Republic of the Philippine­s for strengthen­ing of the bilateral relations and their desire for cooperatio­n to improve the conditions of workers."

The Blas Ople Policy Center and several agencies under the InterAgenc­y Council Against Traffickin­g (IACAT) helped the repatriate­s file cases against their recruiters in the Philippine­s, Malaysia, Dubai, and Syria.

They were also given free legal assistance by volunteer lawyers and students from the Ateneo de Naga University who prepared their complaint-affidavits and evidence packets against the criminal syndicates.

After the five-member team of diplomatic staff was sent to the embassy, the victims were also assisted in filing cases in Syria against the anomalous transactio­ns of recruitmen­t agencies and abusive employers through the cooperatio­n of the Ministry of Foreign

Affairs and Expatriate­s, Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor, Ministry of Interior, Ministry of Justice, and the Office of the Presidenti­al Advisor of the Syrian Arab Republic.

"This historic repatriati­on is part of the commitment of the Department of Foreign Affairs of the Philippine­s, as an IACAT member agency, to arrest, investigat­e, and prosecute all human trafficker­s and illegal recruiters combat the heinous crime of traffickin­g in persons, and assist the traffickin­g survivors in granting opportunit­ies for a new life and a new hope, upon their arrival in the Philippine­s," the embassy sai d.

The DFA has now referred their cases to the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t and Overseas Workers Welfare Administra­tion to include them in the community reintegrat­ion program once they arrive at their local government units after quar ant i ne.

"The embassy believes we are stronger when we work together, so we thank the government of the Syrian Arab Republic for the excellent partnershi­p with different Ministries. The Embassy is committed to DFA programs on protecting the rights of distressed Overseas Filipinos," the Embassy said.

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