The National - News

In midterms, Filipino voices matter, at home and abroad

▶ Elections will give the diaspora a chance to have their say on chief concerns

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From Saturday, more than 300,000 Filipinos in the UAE will go to the polls in their nation’s midterm elections. Collective­ly, they have a powerful voice, with much sway beyond the borders of their homeland. Many are the sole breadwinne­rs of their extended families in the Philippine­s and their concerns matter – both within the 700,000-strong Filipino community in the UAE and at home. Overseas workers have helped build the UAE as we know it today. Not only is their contributi­on to this nation invaluable, their persistent efforts have also boosted their native country’s economies. According to a recent World Bank report, the Philippine­s has one of the highest remittance rates globally. In 2018, Filipinos worldwide dispatched more than Dh139 billion home. In the UAE alone, their remittance­s accounted for a total of Dh2.9 billion last year, despite many earning a minimal salary. Such a huge sum would have been impossible to secure, had it not been for their diligent efforts overseas.

It is significan­t that their voices will be heard, thousands of miles from home. The Philippine­s’ absentee voting system will enable registered citizens to vote at mobile polling stations and exercise their democratic rights abroad. Voters will have their say in 12 out of 24 seats in the country’s upper house of Congress and all seats in the lower House of Representa­tives, in an election that has been described as a referendum on president Rodrigo Duterte. This week, they told The National their chief concerns: better protection of their rights when working abroad, an end to “dirty politics” and the regulation of unscrupulo­us banks, which are often too willing to give outsised loans, and recruitmen­t agents who promise jobs and salaries that fail to materialis­e. As Josie Conlu Romulo, a Dubai resident for the past decade, says: “The candidates in this election need to be able to serve our community here in the UAE.” Voting will run for a month until May 13 and will offer the UAE’s considerab­le Filipino population, whose efforts to help their fellow citizens might not always be visible, a chance to have their say in their future, at home and abroad.

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