Tuesday, August 08, 2006

OFW remittances to top 10% growth in 2006

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said he is confident that the projected ten percent growth for migrant workers’ remittances will be surpassed this year since banks’ penetration of the fund transfer business is now higher.

"(The growth) is more than ten percent now (as of April) and we’re keeping the growth target," said Tetangco. He added, "we’ve been coordinating with the banks, so they can offer financial products that the OFWs (overseas Filipino workers) and their families can buy or participate in."

Tetangco said the BSP wants to see more OFW families putting a part of the remittances in banks or financial products. "(And) for those that don’t have the inclination or the time to manage their investment, the banks will basically manage that for you, that’s also good because there’ll be more resources for banks to invest in productive activities (and a) source of funds for lending."

As of April, OFW cash reached .7 billion, 10.8 percent higher compared to .35 billion in 2005.

Remittance transfers such as internet and online-banking, better rates, expansion of remittance branches and more tie-ups with foreign money transfer agents are encouraging OFWs to transact more with banks. (LCC)

There are an estimated seven million OFWs. The US, Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong and Japan are the top four major sources of remittance flows.

To maintain competitiveness of OFWs, the government pursued programs that will strengthen workers’ technical training and education to enhance job-skills matching.

The continued growth in remittance helps the country’s balance of payments and ensures surpluses, which means more dollar stock.

http://www.mb.com.ph/BSNS2006062267410.html

OWWA shifts blame to Congress

THERE is a P100-million Emergency Repatriation Fund (ERF) for Filipinos working abroad who are faced with war, epidemic, or other widespread disaster or calamity. At least there was, and there should have been, on tap.

Administrator Marianito Roque of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) said had this fund been available, the emergency repatriation of Filipinos from Lebanon would not have been an issue, but it has become a big one because Congress failed.

Now the tables are turned. Lawmakers have browbeaten the OWWA from pillar to post in the wake of the mass retreat from Lebanon of thousands of Filipinos. The OWWA was repeatedly slammed for alleged fund misuse, including bad investments and politics that are being blamed for the lack of money for the repatriation.

The law, said Roque, had mandated that Congress should replenish the agency its P100-million ERF every time it is used up, but that for at least a decade, Congress has failed to do so. The law he mentioned is Republic Act 8042 or the Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipino Act.

“Every year, we must submit a report to Congress of what was deducted [from] the P100 million, for replenishment, so that every year we always have a P100- million basket. But it was not replenished the past 11 years,” said Roque. “Every time we submit to Congress the requested budget for replenishment, it was not acted upon.”

He added that as a result, the government now owes the workers’ fund a total of P155 million, which had been used to repatriate workers in “regular” cases such as injury, death and contract violation.

But he was quick to add that in spite of the ERF lack, the agency is willing to extend more if the P500 million it has allotted as its share in the repatriation of 30,000 OFWs in Lebanon is not enough.

Created under the Marcos dictatorship, the OWWA serves as a trust fund of OFWs who pay $25 each for every contract they enter into. The agency’s total assets including available funds as of December 2005 stands at P8.677 billion.

The issue of where the OWWA funds went had been pursued by senators, but they were rebuffed by the refusal of Cabinet and other administration officials to testify in the Senate labor committee inquiry.

To make sure that Malacañang officials cannot use the same alibi and snub Monday’s resumption of the inquiry on the Lebanon evacuation plans, the Senate Committee on Labor and Employment has enumerated existing bills and resolutions likely to be crafted into law during the hearings, particularly those dealing with safe and quick removal of OFWs from crisis areas.

In a letter to Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita dated August 2, Sen. Jinggoy Estrada, Labor committee chairman, listed down over two dozen bills and resolutions filed by him and fellow senators, “all relating to our overseas contract workers.”

The Executive branch officials had said the inquiry has nothing to do with aiding legislation.---C. Jimenez, J. Cadacio, B. Fernandez, M. Gonzalez

http://www.businessmirror.com.ph/front03.php

God has purpose for OFWs, asserts top-selling author

DIASPORA - DIASPORA

July 25, 2006
Updated 12:29:12 (Mla time)
Blanche Rivera
Inquirer

THEY MIGHT be trapped in back-breaking work and caught up in the middle of turmoil abroad, but overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) are at the center of God’s purpose for the Philippines, according to the author of the bestseller “The Purpose Driven Life.”

Rick Warren, who arrived in Manila on July 23 for the Philippine launch of the Global PEACE Plan, hailed OFWs as the modern “Josephs” who have been placed in strategic places to provide blessings for their families and the people of other countries.

“I don’t know a people so spread out all over the world as Filipinos,” Warren said in a press conference yesterday.

The biblical Joseph, son of Jacob, was sold as a slave to the home of the Egyptian pharaoh. Through diligence and faith, he was able to work his way up to become the most trusted and important leader of Egypt who was used by God to save his family and Israel from famine.

Like missionaries

“God has placed overseas Filipino workers in the homes of the most influential people in the world. They are like missionaries. God wants to use you to bless other nations,” Warren said.

Warren recounted the story of a Filipino baker who had been working for the leader of an Islamic nation for 13 years. The king, whom Warren did not name, came to the baker and offered to double his salary if he converted to Islam.

The Filipino declined, however, saying he already had a relationship with Jesus Christ.

The king asked him why he was serving the Muslim leader so well, and the OFW answered: “Because of my love for the Lord. Jesus tells me to love my neighbor as myself, so I do, and I do everything with excellence.”

Despite being turned down, the king still doubled the baker’s salary.

Christ’s love

“That baker did what I in my capacity as a pastor cannot do officially, which is to speak about Christ’s love to a Muslim king,” Warren said.

“The message of God for the Philippines is not just for this country but for the world. When God touches this country, He’s also touching the whole world,” he said.

Government records show that the number of overseas employment contracts processed for land and sea-based OFWs last year reached 981,337, or an average of 2,711 contracts every day.

Warren and his wife Kay are in Manila for a two-day National Purpose-Driven Congress that will launch the Global PEACE Plan that, according to him, is a grassroots movement aimed at addressing spiritual emptiness, corruption, poverty, disease and illiteracy.

It was the first time Warren had been back to the Philippines since his book, “The Purpose Driven Life,” was released. The book, named by Publisher’s Weekly as the bestselling hardbound book in American history, has sold at least 25 million copies worldwide.

“I love this country. When I came back, I felt like I was coming home,” said Warren, who has been described by Time magazine as one of 15 World Leaders Who Mattered Most in 2004 and one of the 100 Most Influential People in the World in 2005.

The Philippines’s year

“The fourth reason I am here is because I believe God wants to do a spiritual national transformation in the great nation of the Philippines, and I believe it could start this year,” he said.

The Purpose Driven network, a global coalition of congregations in 162 countries, has trained more than 400,000 ministers and priests. Warren’s California-based Saddleback Church has more than 300 community outreach people touching base with prisoners, persons with HIV/AIDS, single parents, businessmen, addicts and homeless people.

“There’s more to life than work and success. Meaning does not come through possession or position or prosperity or power or prestige. It comes through purpose. And the more we know our purpose in life, the more fulfilled, the more meaningful life becomes,” Warren said.

Among the Warrens’ welcomers were showbiz celebrities Gary and Angeli Valenciano, Jericho Rosales, Jamie Rivera, as well as government and Church leaders.

http://services.inq7.net/express/06/08/02/html_output/xmlhtml/20060725-11628-xml.html

Remitting collaborations to develop Philippine science and techno-preneurship

Tuesday, August 01, 2006 MANILA, PHILIPPINES

MentorNet from Peso

By Gerardo Jose la O’
Ph.D
. Candidate
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Examining the list of persons honored with the title, "National Scientist of the Philippines," in the Department of Science and Technology (DoST) website will show that a significant majority of these people obtained their advanced degrees (M.S. or Ph.D.) abroad.

A survey of current Filipino scientists, researchers and engineers in the database Bahay Kubo Research or the Brain Gain Network also shows this same trend.

Clearly, the educational system in the Philippines is either not producing the necessary amount of advanced degree holders or the economy cannot absorb a majority of these persons, leaving them to seek opportunities elsewhere or -- worse -- both.

The dilemma is that once these technically skilled people have left the country, bringing them back home is crammed with hurdles such as inadequate facilities, lack of funding, and no technical community support, to name a few.

However, one does not actually need to physically return to the Philippines to give back knowledge, as the following example shows.

The story of Prof. Baldomero Olivera, a Distinguished Professor of Biology in the University of Utah, is something that can be emulated by the now hundreds of Filipino researchers, scientists and engineers abroad as a model of how scientific ingenuity can be "remitted" into the country. Mr. Olivera has made important scientific contributions in the family of bio-molecules collectively called conotoxins that were derived from cone shells collected in tropical waters of the Philippines. In this groundbreaking work, research collaborations were made with Prof. Lourdes J. Cruz and her students from the University of the Philippines, Marine Science Institute. The results of their nearly three-decades joint effort has been over 50 research papers published, including several articles in one of the world’s most prestigious scientific journals, Science.

It is these types of connections -- foreign-based Filipino researchers and Philippine-based counterparts -- that then help increase the scientific pool of expertise in the Philippines without having the foreign-based Filipino researcher transfer their entire laboratory into the country. In addition, with the large amount of funding available abroad for basic science, these collaborations are actually a good way of increasing research support to the local scientific community without having to tap the limited funds available in the country.

Moreover, beyond the standard literature that is generated with scientific research, this collaborative effort, by professors Olivera and Cruz, has also resulted in the founding of a Philippine-based bioinformatics and biotechnology company called GeneSeas Asia Inc. This company is currently taking a lead in discovering new compounds derived from the Philippine seas, among the most biodiverse in the world, for the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries.

This remarkable achievement is an exception to the rule.

However, with the now hundreds of Filipino researchers, scientists, and engineers abroad, a great number of these collaborative efforts can be started that will allow for creation of direct remittance channels to transfer knowledge and expertise into the emerging centers of science and techno-preneurship in the country. Areas such as agricultural biotechnology and information technology still have vast untapped potentials to provide new avenues for innovation.

Clearly, there is plenty that one can do to help the country develop while being physically away. On the scientific front, it is just a matter of stretching the imagination and reaching out to the technical community in places like Bahay Kubo Research or the Brain Gain Network for collaborative projects that can initiate these remittances of knowledge.

http://itmatters.com.ph/columns.php?id=peso_080106

Officials in OWWA fund row fail to attend Senate inquiry

INQ7 TOP STORIES - TOP STORIES

July 31, 2006
Updated 19:36:39 (Mla time)
Veronica Uy Lira Dalangin-Fernandez Maila Ager
INQ7.net

(2ND UPDATE) OFFICIALS invited by the Senate to shed light on the Overseas Workers’ Welfare Administration fund controversy failed to attend the hearing on Monday, but Philippine Ambassador to Lebanon Al Francis Bicharra reiterated that his office did not receive any money from the Department of Foreign Affairs for the evacuation of Filipino workers from the war-torn country.

Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita cited ongoing “critical operations” for the repatriation of the Filipinos.

In a letter dated July 29 to Senator Jose “Jinggoy” Estrada, chairman of the committee tasked to investigate the case, Ermita said: “Your honor must be aware that all of the government officials invited to the inquiry are currently engaged in critical operations to get our OFWs in Lebanon out of harm's way, and bring them home to the Philippines. It is in the national interest that such officials are allowed to do their job with undiminished time and attention.”

Ermita noted that the invitation did not indicate the “statute that prompted the inquiry or the questions in relation to the inquiry.”

Ermita also asked that he be provided with the above information and be given enough time to prepare for the hearing.

Estrada, head of the committee on labor and employment, crumpled Ermita’s letter after reading it into the record.

“Unfortunately, Ermita’s letter is a clear indication that Malacañang is covering up the loss of funds of the OFWs,” Estrada said.

Estrada said all the government officials invited to the hearing -- OWWA Administrator Marianito Roque, Labor Secretary Arturo Brion, and Foreign Affairs Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs Esteban Conejos -- had confirmed their attendance.

Modena begged off apparently upon instruction from Malacañang,” he said, referring to Philippine Ambassador to Israel Antonio Modena.

Asked about the consequences for these government officials, Estrada said he would discuss with Senate President Manuel Villar the possibility of issuing subpoenas.

Testifying via an overseas phone call, Bicharra authenticated the document he faxed to Senator Joker Arroyo, which indicated that there was no money sent by the DFA.

The paper was signed by Gemma Pangilinan, embassy finance officer and Walter Salmingo, an embassy official.

Bicharra said he wanted the OFWs in Lebanon to be evacuated and therefore money for this purpose should be provided to him.

On Senator Richard Gordon’s inquiry, Bicharra admitted that he wanted 1.1 million dollars for the evacuation of OFWs whose locations he said he did not know.

“As a field commander, it is my position that everyone must leave Lebanon,” said Bicharra who pointed out that as of Monday, 1,763 OFWs have left Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, since the crisis started two weeks ago.

Bicharra replied in the affirmative when Senator Franklin Drilon asked him whether he wanted control of the resources.

But Drilon, former labor secretary, said that by virtue of the Migrant Workers Act, the OWWA had the “administration, control, and supervision of the repatriation fund.

At the same Senate hearing, the Center for Migrant Advocacy (CMA) proposed that the 100 million-peso emergency repatriation fund specified in the Migrant Workers Act be audited and replenished.

CMA Executive Director Ellen Sana also said that the government policy of voluntary repatriation was not acceptable.

“Not showing up at the time of evacuation does not automatically mean that the OFWs opted to stay. Perhaps they failed to show up because they did not know where it is. Perhaps their employers have not allowed them to leave and yet the employers are hesitant or refuse to feel responsible for them,” Sana said.

Sana said the embassy should start working on a registry of OFWs and locate them.

Citing Section 15 of Republic Act 8042, Sana pointed out that the 100 million pesos must initially come from the OWWA, and subsequently replenished by the Office of the President.

“However, as of the last time, we inquired about the funds, OWWA Administrator Roque said that the initial 100 million pesos had already been used up and that OWWA had been advancing further requests for repatriation costs of distressed OFWs,” she said.

After the hearing, Drilon said what he learned was: “They are fighting over the golden rule; whoever has the gold rules. Nag-aagawan sila kung sino ang maghahawak ng pera [They are fighting over who will manage the funds]. So if OWWA has the gold, OWWA rules.”

Reacting to Ermita’s letter, Drilon said the purpose of the hearing was to look into the Migrant Workers’ Act.

“Contrary to the statement of the executive secretary, there is really a need to look at these laws. Because you have a one-country approach under the Migrant Workers' Act, which says that the ambassador has control; whereas the repatriation fund should be under the control of OWWA. So here is the ambassador and OWWA fighting over the golden rule. That is why the ambassador is disgusted because he cannot have control over the funds,” Drilon said.

“The OWWA is claiming and correctly, that under Section 15, it has control over the funds. We must look at this because right now, it's a mess. And you have Ambassador [Roy] Cimatu who is illegally carrying the title of an ambassador because under the rules and under the law, you cannot have an ambassador of rank, unless you are accredited to a country. You have the bureaucracy in a mess because you place one bureaucrat on top of the other. And then you fight over the funds,” Drilon said.

In Malacañang, Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said lawmakers would have to lay down the “parameters” by which congressional inquiries would be conducted.

Bunye said this was based on a Supreme Court decision on Executive Order 464, which had previously banned officials from the executive branch from attending legislative inquiries.

Bunye said this was the first time that they were invoking the Supreme Court ruling since it came out.

Bunye said although they were not invoking EO 464 per se, the Supreme Court ruling recognizes "that there are certain conditions under which members of executive may attend the legislative hearing."

In its ruling, the high tribunal compels these officials to attend the inquiries provided they were “in aid of legislation.”

Malacañang has filed a reconsideration on the Supreme Court ruling. The court has yet to issue a decision.

Although they failed to attend the Senate hearing, Roque, Brion and Conejos were at the Palace during a 1:30 p.m. press conference.

Asked whether snubbing the investigation would raise more suspicion on how the 7.6-billion OWWA funds were being spent, Roque said, "We have nothing to hide," adding that their books are regularly audited.

Asked anew if they were willing to attend future hearings, Roque said "Yes, but based on our meeting today, we just have to establish our predicates first so that we have ample time to present the report on the expenditures on Lebanon."

Brion said the OWWA was set to approve Tuesday additional 300 million pesos in standby fund for the expenses related to the evacuation of Filipinos from Lebanon.

OWWA had authorized the release of 200 million pesos for evacuation, added Brion, who chairs the OWWA board.

“What we have is a calibrated response that is why we are releasing up to 200 million pesos. Now that there are questions on the funds, I can call the OWWA board and tell them to authorize 500 million pesos and, if needed, to have the money released immediately,” Brion said in Filipino.

In a statement released by his office, Brion reiterated that the OWWA was not hoarding funds.

The OWWA has spent 1.5 million dollars for the evacuation and repatriation of OFWs from Lebanon to the Philippines since July, Brion said.

Brion said the amount represented more than 37.5 percent of the four million dollars allocated by the agency for the evacuation and repatriation of OFWs from Lebanon.

He said that the amount was used mainly in paying for the transportation, which covered bus and plane fares of the OFWs from the evacuation site in Lebanon to their arrival in Manila.

Brion added that some of the repatriates were even placed in business class in commercial flights since it was very difficult to get economy plane seats as people in Lebanon scrambled to be flown out.

“The OWWA and the DoLE [Department of Labor and Employment] are exhausting all means to bring home the OFWs in Lebanon who had registered and expressed their desire to be repatriated with our embassy in Beirut,” he said.

Brion explained that OWWA was spending the more than eight billion-peso funds generated out of the contributions of OWWA members “judiciously” to ensure the sustainability of the fund and the continued provision of programs and services to the OFWs and their dependents.

Meanwhile, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo will ask Congress to pass a 500 million-peso supplemental budget for the evacuation of Filipinos in Lebanon, according to Albay Representative Joey Salceda, her economic adviser at the House of Representatives.

Salceda, chairman of the appropriations committee, said the President would submit the proposal, which is on top of the 46.4 billion –peso supplemental budget, on Tuesday.

"I think Congress will quickly approve the 500 million pesos [because] we can’t compromise national interest simply because of some individual's desire to stay in Lebanon," Salceda said in a press briefing.

He said it was just proper that the government got its funding from the general appropriations since the 7.6 million-peso budget of OWWA was for eight million Filipinos abroad and not only for evacuees in Lebanon.

"The OWWA fund does not belong only to the Lebanon OFWs. It belongs to eight million OFWs," Salceda said.

"I think this is a correct use of government [fund] because the national economy has been benefiting from OFWs remittances as a whole and individually," he pointed out.

http://services.inq7.net/express/06/08/01/html_output/xmlhtml/20060731-12684-xml.html

Savings pool from OFW inflows eyed for infra projects

The Philippine Star 07/30/2006

While remittances from overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) are raising the savings rate in the country, this vast pool of savings is a resource "that should be tapped for infrastructure and social development projects," Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Romulo L. Neri said.

In the past few years the country has seen a significant hike in OFW inflows. "This is due in large part to the changing profile of the migrant workers, as more professionals are being deployed. In particular, more nurses and caregivers are working abroad to attend to the elderly across Europe, the Americas, and Asia," he said.

He noted that inflows rose by 25 percent last year reaching $10.7 billion, which is equivalent to around half the national budget for the year. For the first five months of 2006, OFW inflows amounted to $4.9 billion, 14.8 percent higher than the same period last year. The sustained inflows are reflected in the current account surplus, a healthy balance of payments, and record gross international reserves.

The ratio of gross national savings to gross domestic product (GDP) was 23 percent in 2000. It rose to 29.6 percent in 2004 and 30 percent in 2005. Gross national savings include net inflows from abroad.

"As it is, OFW families tend to use their money to buy condominium units, vehicles and appliances, or to put them in time-deposit accounts," said Neri, who is also director general of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA).

"OFW organizations have been inquiring about possible investment opportunities for their members. Hence, I suggest that the government tap this source of capital instead of borrowing from abroad," the NEDA chief pointed out.

"This form of financing will further shift the nation’s credit exposure from foreign to local-denominated debt paper. It is up to the monetary authorities to choose the proper instruments most suitable for tapping the OFW funds," he said.

Neri noted that the money should support the priorities of the updated Medium-Term Public Investment Program (MTPIP). As unveiled in the President’s State of the Nation Address on the super regions, the MTPIP is focused on core infrastructure to open up the vast agricultural areas in Mindanao, connect the whole of Visayas to roll-on roll-off (RORO) ports, and construct highways to connect the rest of Luzon to the rapidly growing areas around Metro Manila.

http://www.philstar.com/philstar/NEWS200607300702.htm

EU helps Lebanon evacuees

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Earmarks Euro 11 M for speedy repatriation Filipinos among beneficiaries of largesse

By CHARISSA M. LUCI

The European Union (EU) has earmarked 11 million euros (roughly R737 million) to provide medical assistance and help in the swift repatriation of foreign evacuees, including Filipino workers, from war-torn Lebanon.

The Philippines is among the major recipients of the EU assistance program, the Delegation of the European Commission to the Philippines said in a statement.

"The Philippines stands to benefit from the allocation of 11 million euros to help around 10,000 citizens from developing countries return home from Lebanon," it said.

Other countries that have large numbers of workers in Lebanon -- including Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Ghana, Vietnam, Nepal eastern European nations and Russia – are also expected to benefit from the program.

"The EU is doing everything in its power to help civilians of all nationalities caught up in this conflict. Alongside all that is being done to help EU nationals get out of Lebanon, it is crucial that we bring third country nationals to safety," Benita Ferrero-Waldner, Commissioner for External Relations and European Neighborhood Policy, said.

"The package announced will mean swift help for those who need it most, and help to avoid creating new humanitarian crises in transit countries," Waldner said, noting that there are about 100,000 to 200,000 workers from developing countries living in Lebanon at the time the Middle East crisis broke out last July 12.

The allocation of 11 million euros is part of the European Commission’s Rapid Reaction Mechanism following the appeal of developing countries for help in the repatriation of their nationals from Lebanon.

The package "will assist in evacuating the most vulnerable people and help the Lebanese authorities and developing countries evacuate those who remain in Lebanon, provide support and medical assistance to evacuees in transit countries (mainly Syria, Jordan and Cyprus) and help in a swift and orderly repatriation to their home countries," the Commission said.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) serves as the implementing arm of the program, the EU said.

Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary for the United Nations and Other Internal Organizations Aladin G. Villacorte said the IOM assured that it will assist in the orderly repatriation of 450 Filipino workers starting today.

Nine buses will be used for the transportation of two batches of Filipino workers from Beirut to Damascus, Syria. They will be escorted by a diplomatic convoy, Villacorte said.

The first batch of 250 Filipinos will be transported today while the rest is scheduled tomorrow.

"The IOM has already communicated with the Israeli authorities to ensure the safe passage of the convoys," he said.

The additional 450 Filipino workers will be flown via Boeing 747 aircraft on Aug. 1 and are expected to arrive on Aug. 2 at the Villamor Airbase Operation Center.

"The IOM will shoulder all the costs for the buses, temporary shelter in Damascus including food and medical attention and chartered flight to Manila," Villacorte said.

Meanwhile, Foreign Affairs spokesman Gilberto Asuque said the seventh batch of 62 OFWs, including two infants, arrived yesterday via Qatar Airways Flight 646 at the Ninoy Aquino International (NAIA).

An additional 10 OFWs from Lebanon were scheduled to arrive at 6: 30 last night on board Cathay Pacific Airways Flight CX 903 from Hongkong.

The ninth batch numbering 120 Filipinos is expected to arrive today aboard Thai Airways Flight TG 620 from Bangkok, Asuque said in a text message.

In a related development, he said the Crisis Management Committee has sent another $ 150,000 to the Philippine embassy in Beirut to fund the operations.

"Ambassador Bichara cabled us last Wednesday and we immediately sent them US$ 150,000," he said, citing that they have ironed out the "administrative" matters hounding the embassy.

Earlier, Ambassador Francis Bichara reportedly said the embassy has unstable financial capability to fund the repatriation of the Filipinos in Lebanon.

Upon Bichara’s request, a total of $ 100,000 (P5.2 million) had been given to the embassy as financial assistance since the start of the war.

As of July 26, the embassy has $ 17,848 on hand and $ 69, 917.50 in the bank.

Reacting to the statement of former Ambassador Roy Seneres questioning why Ambassador Roy Cimatu, the head of the Middle East Preparedness Team (MEPT), led the repatriation and not Bichara, Asuque said, "The President is in charge of Oplan Sagip, and we will implement the President’s instruction. We work as a team."

More than 600 Filipino workers have arrived in Manila since the start of the repatriation process last July 23.

The sixth batch of 25 Filipinos arrived last Thursday at the Ninoy Aquino International on board Cathay Pacific Airways Flight CX903 at 6:30 p.m. from Damascus via Hongkong.

http://www.mb.com.ph/MAIN2006072970375.html

OWWA releases $2 million for repatriation of overseas workers

By Mayen Jaymalin
The Philippine Star 07/29/2006

Amid controversy of missing funds, the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) approved yesterday the release of an additional $2 million for the repatriation of distressed overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) from war-torn Lebanon.

OWWA board of trustees member and Philippine Association of Mediterranean Agencies Deploying Labour (PAMADEL) president Estrelita Hizon said they have allocated additional funds to ensure the continued repatriation of Filipino workers from the war-torn country.

"We are not waiting for the funds to run out so we are allocating fresh funding," she said.

Hizon also belied reports that the government lacks funds for the repatriation.

Earlier, Ambassador to Lebanon Alfrancis Bichara alleged that the Philippine embassy in Lebanon is already running out of money and that he has yet to receive fresh funds from Manila despite President Arroyo’s order for the allocation of P150 million for the repatriation of OFWs.

A visibly enraged OWWA chief Marianito Roque demanded an immediate investigation against Bichara for coming out with what he said were unfounded accusations against the government.

"There is really nothing to be worried or alarmed about. We are doing our job, it’s just that there is a misguided ambassador who seems not to be in control of his own people," Roque said.

He said the Philippine embassy in Lebanon has the needed funds but Bichara was apparently not aware of it.

According to Roque, the ambassador was obviously not talking with his people and was not aware of what was happening within his jurisdiction.

"He has not talked to his people, his finance officer, he is not even in control of his own embassy," Roque said. "He was not even in Beirut (when the war erupted) and when he came he started doing a lot of accusations."

Based on Bichara’s report, opposition Sen. Jinggoy Estrada called for an investigation into the alleged missing P8 billion in OWWA funds for the repatriation of workers from Lebanon.

"There is no missing fund. We have them all here," Roque said, adding that Bichara was "imagining his problem" when he made the allegations.

Roque added that Bichara is set to issue an apology for his allegation.

Last week, OWWA allocated an initial $2 million for the evacuation of an estimated 2,000 Filipinos from Lebanon. The fund covered the transportation cost and other incidental expenses related to repatriation.

About 700 OFWs have already been repatriated since the war broke out in Lebanon last July 12.

Meanwhile, Hizon reported that member agencies of PAMADEL have agreed to redeploy abroad Filipino workers displaced by the ongoing war in Lebanon without collecting placement fees.

"To help ease the burden of our workers from Lebanon, our member agencies agreed not to collect placement fees if they would decide to seek employment in other Middle East countries," Hizon said.

Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) chief Rosalinda Baldoz said her office is ready to facilitate the immediate redeployment of displaced workers from Lebanon.

"We would redeploy them if they would choose to work again as domestic helpers or look for other jobs in other Middle East countries but of course their deployment would depend on the availability of job orders," Baldoz said.

Aside from the redeployment program, the government has also vowed to facilitate the hiring of displaced workers from Lebanon in local jobs as well as provide livelihood assistance.

‘Work as a team’

Meanwhile, Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) spokesman Gilberto Asuque said yesterday that all agencies involved in implementing Oplan Sagip OFWs should work as a team, with President Arroyo as the team leader.

"The President is in charge of Oplan Sagip OFWs. We will implement it and her instructions," Asuque said. "Let us wait for (DFA Secretary Alberto Romulo) and we will follow his instructions for those civil servants involved in Oplan Sagip."

Asuque’s statement was echoed by Senators Mar Roxas and Richard Gordon, who urged government officials involved in the repatriation to work as a team.

Bichara had apologized to Romulo and said there was a miscommunication among embassy staff regarding the funds for repatriation.

Asuque said the DFA released on Thursday the amount of $150,000 to the embassy. The day before, the DFA received Bichara’s request to replenish embassy funds and the Home Office sent the money through telegraphic transfer.

As of July 26, the DFA said the embassy has $17,848 cash on hand and another $69,917.50 in a Lebanon bank.

In a related development, a seventh batch of 60 OFWs, excluding two half-Lebanese children, came home on board a Qatar Airways flight yesterday afternoon at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

Many of the OFWs said they were relieved to finally be home after suffering many anxious moments in Beirut.

Esmely Reyes, the mother of the two half-Lebanese children, said she has mixed feelings in returning to the Philippines since it made her sad to be apart from her Lebanese husband, who has returned to his work in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. With Pia Lee-Brago, Rainier Allan Ronda, Marvin Sy

http://www.philstar.com/philstar/NEWS200607290409.htm

Palace skirts OWWA fund controversy

NEWS - BREAKING NEWS

July 28, 2006
Updated 21:53:24 (Mla time)
Lira Dalangin-Fernandez
INQ7.net

THE OPPOSITION should stop “muckraking and grandstanding” on the issue involving the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) funds, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s spokesman said Friday, as he skirted claims that there was not enough money for the evacuation of Filipinos in strife-torn Lebanon.

Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said what was important right now was to bring back the Filipino workers and ensure the safety of those who would choose to stay in Lebanon.

Reacting to a move by some senators to investigate claims that funds for the ongoing evacuation of Filipinos from Lebanon were inadequate, Bunye told reporters in a weekly forum at the Ambassador Hotel in Manila that "at this time, investigations would be counterproductive."

"The least we can afford is grandstanding and muckraking which will only get in the way of the evacuation efforts," he said in a separate statement.

Pro-opposition Senator Jose “Jinggoy” Estrada said he would conduct an investigation into claims that OWWA lacked funds to repatriate Filipinos out of Lebanon.

This stemmed from Philippine Ambassador to Beirut Al Francis Bicharra’s allegation that the embassy had run out of funds to send the Filipinos back to the Philippines, which Foreign Affairs and Palace officials had refuted.

Estrada questioned why the President only released 150 million pesos when the OWWA had 7.6 billion pesos.

Arroyo has ordered the release of 150 million pesos on top of the 500,000 dollars that had been released for evacuation.

Asked if there was no anomaly in the use of the OWWA fund, Bunye said there would be enough time for this later.

Bunye said the government wanted "zero casualty" and was prepared to take "all necessary steps" to keep Filipinos out of harm's way.

"The President has clear standing orders to our Lebanon crisis team to mobilize all necessary resources possible to ensure the safety of our workers," he said.

Bunye said glitches in the release of funds were being ironed out even as the government was accelerating the evacuation, relief, and transport activities.

"We are not taking any chances and we are fully aware of the fluidity of the situation and the need to be always prepared," Bunye said.

(One dollar = 51.628 pesos)

http://services.inq7.net/express/06/07/29/html_output/xmlhtml/20060728-12273-xml.html

RP ambassador to Beirut apologizes for OWWA faux pas

NEWS - BREAKING NEWS

July 28, 2006
Updated 21:45:54 (Mla time)
Lira Dalangin-Fernandez
INQ7.net

(2ND UPDATE) PHIILIPPINE Ambassador to Beirut Al Francis Bichara has apologized to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) for claiming that there was no more money for the evacuation of Filipinos from strife-torn Lebanon.

Bichara addressed his letter of apology to Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo. It was read aloud by Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita at a press conference in Malacañang Friday.

"Please allow me to offer my apology for any inconvenience or embarrassment that might have been generated by my comments during a television interview concerning funding operations of the Embassy," Bichara said.

"I was just trying to be candid and did not mean that the Philippine government had no money for the evacuation," he added. "I assure you, Mr. Secretary, that I will continue exerting my utmost efforts to ensure success of this evacuation."

Bichara said his complaint was the result of a "miscommunication."

He said his staff had allegedly led him believe they only had 50,000 US dollars for evacuation and could not use the embassy's working funds amounting to 200,000 dollars.

But DFA Undersecretary Esteban Conejos said Bichara was at the July 12 meeting of DFA officials, when the crisis in Lebanon began, during which a directive was issued authorizing the embassy in Beirut to use its 200,000-dollar fund for the evacuation of workers wishing to flee Lebanon.

On July 13, Conejos said the DFA issued a separate directive augmenting the embassy's fund for evacuation with 50,000 US dollars.

Conejos said Bichara left only for Lebanon on July 21.

Ermita said it was up to the DFA if it wanted to take action against Bichara.

"While there is a crisis, we do not wish to disturb the work of officials on the ground," Ermita said.

Conejos and other members of the government’s “crisis management team” on the Lebanon evacuations - Overseas Workers Welfare Administration chief Marianito Roque, Labor Secretary Arturo Brion, and Philippine Overseas Employment Agency administrator Rosalina Baldoz - were at the Palace press conference called by Ermita.

Bichara's complaints over the alleged lack of funds prompted the Senate to announce an inquiry, on the request of Senator Richard Gordon, into the status of the 7.6-billion pesos overseas workers’ fund in the safekeeping of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA).

Opposition Senator Jose “Jinggoy” Estrada said he would grant Gordon's request for an inquiry and questioned why President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo had only released 150 million pesos when the OWWA was supposed to have the funds.

OWWA Administrator Marianito Roque said he was prepared to face the Senate inquiry and explained that the funds are intact and deposited with the land Bank of the Philippines and Development Bank of the Philippines.

"It is intact in these two banks," Roque said.

Roque said the OWWA board met with the two banks Friday and a report has been submitted on the status of the fund.

Apart from the 7.6 billion pesos, Roque said the OWWA also has about 200 million pesos in savings with the Land Bank, which the agency is now using to fund present evacuation efforts.

Ermita said he had also been in discussion with the President on the issues, although she is confined at the St. Lukes Medical Center for flu.

He said the OWWA has signed up an investment management agreement entrusting the fund to the banks to manage and invest in government securities, both treasury bonds and treasury bills.

Earlier on Friday, Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye asked the opposition to stop its “muckraking and grandstanding” over the OWWA fund controversy.

Bunye said what was important right now was to bring back the Filipino workers and ensure the safety of those who choose to stay in Lebanon.

Reacting to a move by some senators to investigate claims that funds for the ongoing evacuation of Filipinos from Lebanon were inadequate, Bunye told reporters in a weekly forum at the Ambassador Hotel in Manila that "at this time, investigations would be counterproductive."

"The least we can afford is grandstanding and muckraking which will only get in the way of the evacuation efforts," he said in a separate statement.

Bunye said the government wanted "zero casualty" and was prepared to take "all necessary steps" to keep Filipinos out of harm's way.

"The President has clear standing orders to our Lebanon crisis team to mobilize all necessary resources possible to ensure the safety of our workers," he said.

He said there would be enough time later to look into allegations of anomalies in the use of the OWWA fund.

Bunye said glitches in the release of funds were being ironed out even as the government was accelerating its evacuation, relief, and transport activities.

"We are not taking any chances and we are fully aware of the fluidity of the situation and the need to be always prepared," Bunye said.

http://services.inq7.net/express/06/07/29/html_output/xmlhtml/20060728-12287-xml.html

7 OFWs held by Lebanese authorities

INQ7 BREAKING NEWS - NATION

July 29, 2006
Updated 13:55:32 (Mla time)
Veronica Uy
INQ7.net GMA7

(UPDATE) THE Lebanese government has stopped seven overseas Filipino workers from leaving after their Lebanese employers complained of missing valuables, Foreign Affairs Undersecretary for Special Concerns Rafael Seguis said Saturday.

In a long-distance interview from Syria, Seguis said 29 of 307 OFWs scheduled to leave Lebanon for Damascus, Syria, Friday afternoon (Middle East time) were held at the immigration office.

Subsequently, seven of them were told to return to Beirut.

“It wasn't a problem with the Syrian immigration, it was problem at the Lebanese side,” Seguia said.

Seguis said the OFWs got to the Lebanon-Syria border at around 2 p.m. Friday and were released about 10 hours later, or around midnight (5 a.m. Saturday, Philippine time).

“Everyone was delayed because the 29 were not in one bus, they were distributed in the six buses, and their instructions were they should be together. With the luggage and all, they were only able to pull out from the border around midnight,” he added.

GMA Network’s dzBB said the 300 other OFWs were at a relocation center some 80 kilometers from Damascus to await eventual repatriation.

http://services.inq7.net/express/06/07/29/html_output/xmlhtml/20060729-12443-xml.html

244 Filipinos from Lebanon arrive Saturday

INQ7 BREAKING NEWS - NATION

July 29, 2006
Updated 16:09:27 (Mla time)
Veronica Uy
INQ7.net GMA7

(2ND UPDATE) A TOTAL of 244 Filipinos are returning on Saturday from war-torn Lebanon, GMA Network’s dzBB reported.

The first batch of 89 overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), with three children, or a total of 92, arrived around 2 p.m. at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) onboard a Qatar Airways flight.

They were immediately processed and taken to the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) office in Pasay City to make room for the second batch of around 120 expected to arrive 3:30 p.m. on a Thai Airways flight from Bangkok.

At 3:30 p.m., a second batch of 120 flew in on a Thai Airways flight from Bangkok.

Among them was Liezel Saludo of Kabankalan City, Negros Occidental, who was in a wheelchair with fractures on her arm and leg, stitches on her face and other injuries from what she told reporters at the NAIA was an accident in Lebanon.

Saludo was weeping because she said her relatives in Negros do not know she was returning.

A third batch of 20 is arriving around 6:30 p.m. on Cathay Pacific CX 903 from Hong Kong while the fourth and last batch of the day, a group of 12, is flying in on another Qatar Airways flight around 11 p.m.

http://services.inq7.net/express/06/07/29/html_output/xmlhtml/20060729-12431-xml.html