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Duterte urges 260,000 Filipino workers in Kuwait to come home

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April 28,2018

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SINGAPORE — President Rodrigo Duterte called on the 260,000 Filipinos working in Kuwait, most of them employed as domestic helpers, to return home, saying the Gulf state apparently did not want their services anymore.

“To you there in Kuwait, [to] those who are not really household helpers, I now appeal to your sense of patriotism: Come home, anyway there are now many jobs in the Philippines,” the President said, addressing the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Kuwait.

“I will look for money and I will get all, all the Filipino workers (in Kuwait),” he told about 6,000 members of the Filipino community in Singapore, where he had attended the 32nd Association of Southeast Asian Nations Summit.

Bad news’

The President told his audience at Big Box center that he had “bad news” about the diplomatic row between Kuwait and the Philippines over the recent rescue of abused Filipino maids by Philippine Embassy staff in Kuwait.

The rescue had angered the Kuwaiti government, saying the act violated the country’s sovereignty and ordered Philippine Ambassador Rene Villa to leave the country.

The President said ties between the two nations were now “being put to the test.”

“I plead that since there is a total ban on deployment, I don’t want them anymore to [go to Kuwait] because apparently [the Kuwaitis] do not like them,” he said.

“Do not hurt” the Filipino workers and “treat them deserving of a human being,” he appealed to the Kuwaitis.

The President said he could use funds given by China to “get all those who want to go home” and joked about robbing a bank to get more money.

He did not say how many or what kind of jobs awaited those willing to heed his call to return.

Diplomatic ruckus’

Despite what he described as a “diplomatic ruckus” between the two countries, the President said there was no anger or hatred in his heart toward Kuwait.


He was thankful to Kuwait for helping OFWs, whom he said owed a debt of gratitude to the Gulf state.

“If the presence of Filipinos is a burden to you, allow us to get them out,” the President said. “As the President of the nation, it behooves upon me to do something.”

On Friday, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said the President would announce an important “course of action” in connection with the diplomatic crisis.

Roque said the President’s move would be “Solomonic” and “dramatic.”

He said the President arrived at the decision on the Kuwait problem on his own, “something he personally crafted” and that it was “not specially recommended by anyone.”

“It shows his experience on governance and there’s wisdom I guess even in the number of years of leadership and as well as in his age,” Roque said
 
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Good move.
This guy has the guts to tell these Khalijis to shove it.
 
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https://gulfnews.com/search?action=...heddate_descending&freeText=China+deal+300000
China’s deal to hire 300,000 Filipinos finalised
All the OFWs would be working in Beijing and Shanghai and three other major cities, official says
Published: 15:14 April 14, 2018
Barbara Mae Dacanay, Correspondent

Manila: The Philippines and China have signed an agreement that lifts Beijing’s restriction on foreign workers and will soon pave the way for the employment of 300,000 Filipinos, including 100,000 English-medium teachers, Philippine Labour Secretary Bello III has said.

The top Philippine official and Chinese ambassador to the Philippines Zhao Jianhua signed a memorandum of understanding, which states that a Filipino teacher will be paid $1,500 (Dh6,500) a month, Bello told Gulf News on Saturday.

The agreement covers details such salaries and other benefits, work hours, terms of employment, and labour protection to prevent abuses, Bello said.

China’s labour ministry is also seeking to recruit Filipino cooks, caregivers, household service workers, musicians, and nurses, Bello said, adding that Chinese families could now afford to offer OFWs decent salaries.

He did not reveal the respective salary rates of the other categories of OFWs who would be hired in China.


“There is a big demand for English teachers in China. Chinese nationals want their children to speak English. They lack sufficient numbers of teachers who can speak English. Families want English-speaking maids who could tutor children with their studies. China also has a growing ageing population,” Bello said, adding all the OFWs would be working in Beijing and Shanghai and three other major cities.

Recruitment agencies were advised to include Chinese culture and norms in the training of workers who will work in the mainland; and to look thoroughly at the Chinese employers who want to employ OFWs.

Filipinos seeking employment in China must contact agencies accredited by the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), which has a list of legitimate agencies with valid license on Facebook, Bello said.

The bilateral labour agreement between China and the Philippines was supposed to be signed in November 2017.

Many believe that China is not a traditional destination for OFWs. Officially listed are 12,254 OFWs in mainland China. But up to 200,000 OFWs have been working illegally in China, as of 2016. At the time, China had a strict work visa policy, Bello said.

He did not say if the Philippines-China bilateral labour agreement has a provision to legitimise the 200,000 illegal OFWs in China; or if China will allow OFWs in Hong Kong to seek employment in the mainland. There are 140,000 OFWs in Hong Kong, some of whom are teachers working as maids.

Labour unions in Hong Kong warned earlier that OFWs might transfer to the mainland because it has offered higher salary rates in all levels. Hong Kong could suffer severe shortage of English-speaking domestic Filipino helpers, labour leaders said.

The Philippines has been seeking bilateral agreements with all the countries where it sends OFWs — specially with receiving countries that have not signed International Labour Organisations’ labour conventions that spell out the rights of migrant workers for decent job.

The Philippines has forged only 13 bilateral labour agreements with receiving countries even if 10 million OFWs are based in 180 countries.

 
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Good move.
This guy has the guts to tell these Khalijis to shove it.

I hope Pakistanis & Indian Muslims Take these jobs after Filipinos have left.
I think Job Demand in Qatar ,Kuwait ,Bahrain ,

Pakistan Govt must strengthen its dilplomacy in GCC to hire Pakistani WorkForce & get them employed.
 
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I hope Pakistanis & Indian Muslims Take these jobs after Filipinos have left.
I think Job Demand in Qatar ,Kuwait ,Bahrain ,

Pakistan Govt must strengthen its dilplomacy in GCC to hire Pakistani WorkForce & get them employed.

More appropriate suggestion (for educated one's) is to go to china on work visa and teach English. I have a friend who have dine eye specialisation from China. He said i made 12000 yuan in a month by teaching English in an academy. And major benefit is, that you are respected.
 
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More appropriate suggestion (for educated one's) is to go to china on work visa and teach English. I have a friend who have dine eye specialisation from China. He said i made 12000 yuan in a month by teaching English in an academy. And major benefit is, that you are respected.

I say Bring it on ,Be it Kuwait or Qatar , GCC or EU , China or USA
We must send our work force it be employed & earn .

Be it where ever.
 
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What a great leader. He might say some foolish things sometimes but I admire his efforts for his people.
 
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April 28,2018

View attachment 470223


SINGAPORE — President Rodrigo Duterte called on the 260,000 Filipinos working in Kuwait, most of them employed as domestic helpers, to return home, saying the Gulf state apparently did not want their services anymore.

“To you there in Kuwait, [to] those who are not really household helpers, I now appeal to your sense of patriotism: Come home, anyway there are now many jobs in the Philippines,” the President said, addressing the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Kuwait.

“I will look for money and I will get all, all the Filipino workers (in Kuwait),” he told about 6,000 members of the Filipino community in Singapore, where he had attended the 32nd Association of Southeast Asian Nations Summit.

Bad news’

The President told his audience at Big Box center that he had “bad news” about the diplomatic row between Kuwait and the Philippines over the recent rescue of abused Filipino maids by Philippine Embassy staff in Kuwait.

The rescue had angered the Kuwaiti government, saying the act violated the country’s sovereignty and ordered Philippine Ambassador Rene Villa to leave the country.

The President said ties between the two nations were now “being put to the test.”

“I plead that since there is a total ban on deployment, I don’t want them anymore to [go to Kuwait] because apparently [the Kuwaitis] do not like them,” he said.

“Do not hurt” the Filipino workers and “treat them deserving of a human being,” he appealed to the Kuwaitis.

The President said he could use funds given by China to “get all those who want to go home” and joked about robbing a bank to get more money.

He did not say how many or what kind of jobs awaited those willing to heed his call to return.

Diplomatic ruckus’

Despite what he described as a “diplomatic ruckus” between the two countries, the President said there was no anger or hatred in his heart toward Kuwait.


He was thankful to Kuwait for helping OFWs, whom he said owed a debt of gratitude to the Gulf state.

“If the presence of Filipinos is a burden to you, allow us to get them out,” the President said. “As the President of the nation, it behooves upon me to do something.”

On Friday, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said the President would announce an important “course of action” in connection with the diplomatic crisis.

Roque said the President’s move would be “Solomonic” and “dramatic.”

He said the President arrived at the decision on the Kuwait problem on his own, “something he personally crafted” and that it was “not specially recommended by anyone.”

“It shows his experience on governance and there’s wisdom I guess even in the number of years of leadership and as well as in his age,” Roque said

Great, patriotic, pragmatic leader.

There is apparently lots of horror stories surrounding those domestic helpers in, especially, Gulf states. It is the right time for the PH to call them back home as the country is now on the right political and economic track.
 
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Duterte is a man of the people. Many leaders would like to say they care but few have the courage to carry out such actions.

Exactly. Being a former colony and recent political slave of the US does not help. It may come with certain benefits for the local ruling elite, but, if the elite decides to decouple or some non-elite grabs power and challenges US political-economic colonization, then, future may be very bleak.

History is stuffed with examples of such unfortunate ends for small nations. Duterte was smart to get close to China while decoupling from the US. This is the only realistic way for him to survive.
 
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More appropriate suggestion (for educated one's) is to go to china on work visa and teach English. I have a friend who have dine eye specialisation from China. He said i made 12000 yuan in a month by teaching English in an academy. And major benefit is, that you are respected.
12000 Yuan for how many hours a day?
 
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