Migrante-Ontario launched in
Toronto:
Vows to Fight and Defend the Rights of Filipino Migrants
Toronto, Canada
November 4, 2007
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Progressive Filipino organizations in Toronto, Canada launched Migrante - Ontario on Nov. 4, 2007. The new alliance "vows to lead in the active struggle to effectively and continuously uphold and defend the rights and welfare of Filipino migrants and their families. It also undertakes to implement a responsive and pro-active program of action that would uplift the conditions of Filipino migrants and their families in Ontario."
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PRESS STATEMENT |
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Solidarity Message to launch of Migrante-Ontario November 4, 2007 By the Executive Committee
Warmest greetings! As an alliance of more than 100 organizations across 22 countries, Migrante International today salutes all the officers and members of the various organizations that have come together to form and launch Migrante-Ontario. It is indeed an opportune time for UFIND, GABAY/AWARE, UKPC-Toronto, PATAC and SIKLAB-Ontario to unite given the rising challenges for overseas Filipinos and their families in your region.
We also congratulate your organizations for leading various successful campaigns, including the ones for justice for Elenita Pailanan and Jocelyn Dulnuan – two live-in caregivers who symbolize the heights of exploitation and criminal neglect that overseas Filipino workers are subject to under the Arroyo administration.
Although they died under different circumstances, the Philippine consulate responded to them in the same way: they turned their backs on them. Despite the billions of dollars in remittances that overseas Filipinos infuse into the economy, the Arroyo administration essentially left the families of Elenita and Jocelyn to fend for themselves.
Given the increasing numbers of overseas Filipino workers exported to Canada, we foresee a rise in such cases of government criminal neglect against overseas Filipinos. As such, the need for Migrante-Ontario is greater than ever.
In 2006, the number of Filipinos exported to Canada reached 6,468 – that is almost double the 3,629 that went in 2005. For remittances, Filipinos in Canada last year sent home around $591 million in remittances, which is a whopping 405% increase from the amount of $117 million they sent in 2005.
This intensified export of Filipinos to Canada is mirrored in the record-high numbers of Filipinos forced to leave the country daily. In 2006, an estimated 1.08 million Filipinos left the country to work in over 190 countries. The majority still toil as domestic workers, laborers and seafarers. Remittances last year reached US$12.8 billion while this year alone, remittances have consistently breached the US$1 billion mark monthly.
But in spite of how overseas Filipinos systematically prop up the ailing Philippine economy with their remittances, abuses against them still abound. Last year, our Migrants Rights and Welfare Program documented more than 1,000 cases of OFWs who were illegally recruited, raped, imprisoned, murdered, maltreated or in need of repatriation.
Currently, the most extreme cases of injustice against Filipino migrants include the plight of Marilou Ranario and 34 other OFWs languishing on death row and the exploitation and criminalization of the nurses known collectively as the Sentosa 27++ in New York.
But while we are hit with various cases of human rights violations almost daily, our strong campaigns and coordinated global actions have allowed us to achieve many gains and victories throughout our history.
Among them are the successful scrapping of the double taxation and the non-implementation of a directive to almost double the forced membership fee for migrants at the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration. Recently, we exposed the corruption of funds at the OWWA during the height of the Lebanon Crisis and we also continue to raise high the alarm over the government’s long neglect of OFWs in prison and on death row.
But as we mark our victories, there are also immediate tasks at hand:
In closing, let us maximize together the role that overseas Filipinos and their families play in attaining justice for our compatriots and in forging a Philippines that has national industrialization and genuine land reform – as part of our effort to attain a dream of a homeland wherein families are no longer torn apart because of the need to survive.
Migrante International again salutes all the members and officers of Migrante-Ontario! Let us forge even greater heights of strength and unity – for overseas Filipinos and the Filipino people!
Mabuhay ang Migrante-Ontario! Mabuhay ang migrante at pamilya! Itaguyod ang pambansang demokratikong pakikibaka!
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