Posted by Pahayag ng Migrante
Rome, Italy 06/04/2014
The Philippine government has found a way
to maximize the move by the Saudi government in 2011 stopping the issuance of
working visas to Philippine-hired household service workers, by pursuing a new
recruitment scheme in the deployment of Filipino workers through
institutionalization of Saudi based mega recruitment firms into the existing
bilateral labor agreement between the two countries. These mega-recruitment
firms, which are being pushed for by Rosalinda Baldoz, secretary of the
Philippine Department of Labor and Employment, is designed to further intensify
the recruitment and deployment of OFWs and aspiring job-seekers from among the
millions of unemployed Filipinos.
“Yet protection mechanisms for OFW workers’ rights remain diluted in the absence of defined social legislations taken by the host government to ensure that their rights are recognized, respected and honored.” Said John Leonard Monterona, coordinator of Migrante Middle East-North Africa (MENA).
“The decision by the host government to stop issuing work visas to Philippine-hired household service workers (HSWs) in 2011 had created a row between the two governments,” he said.
“The Philippines’ Labor Department had imposed several requirements, such as a sketch of employers’ houses in Saudi Arabia, a minimum wage of $400 and the provision of ATM cards to domestic workers, among other stipulations,” he said. “This came in response to demands made by OFW groups to provide concrete protection for OFWs. These groups were spearheaded by Kapatiran sa Gitnang Silangan (KGS), an affiliate of Migrante >International in Saudi Arabia.”
The Saudi Labor Ministry temporarily stopped issuing work visas for one year at the time following objections on the strenuous requirements issued by the Philippines government. The mega recruitment scheme was then created in 2012 following rounds of negotiations between the two labor departments.
According to Hans Cacdac, chief of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), the mega recruitment scheme was signed during Baldoz’s visit to Riyadh in Febrauray, These companies are highly capitalized recruitment ventures and will allegedly ensure that recruiters in the Kingdom have the right resources to provide accommodation, protection and repatriation costs.
“Clearly, the agreement between the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) and the POEA is solely focusing on intensifying the exportation of Filipino labor amid worsening unemployment woes in the country,” said Monterona. “Sad to say, all this comes at the expense of OFWs well-being, rights and welfare.”
“We have serious doubts about some of the provisions stated in the scheme, such as the end of service or gratuity clauses,” he said. “The latter is not even recognized by the Saudi labor law.”
“These firms will now be solely responsible for the employment of OFWs, diminishing the role of government officials in solving labor cases,” he said.
The government failed to generate local jobs with decent wages and benefits for Filipino workers. This is why it is desperate in pushing for the implementation of the mega recruitment scheme, which had been recently rejected by the Shoura Council and the Saudi Council of Ministers.
The current government relies heavily on foreign remittances instead of developing the local economy by implementing agrarian programs and national industrialization schemes.
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