‘No Resign, No Remit’
OFWs press for Arroyo’s ouster
Two major migrant
workers groups launch “No Resign, No Remit” campaign to press for the
ouster of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
BY AUBREY SC MAKILAN
Bulatlat

FIL-AM activists rally
for GMA ouster in front of Philippine consulate in Los Angeles,
California |
“No Resign, No
Remit.”
Migrante
International and Migrante Sectoral Party (MSP) jointly issued this
statement as their members met July 5 to launch Outrage, a broad alliance
of migrants, their families and advocates calling for President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s ouster. The “No Resign, No Remit” forum was held
at the University of the Philippines in Quezon City.
Connie Bragas
Regalado, Migrante chair and Outrage spokesperson, told Bulatlat
that now Macapagal-Arroyo could no longer say she still has the support of
the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) because no dollars will flow in to
help her government survive.
“Remittances
constitute almost 10% of the country’s gross national product (GNP) and
it’s the only thing (artificially) keeping the Philippine economy
float,” said Roque.
|
Bragas-Regalado said that remittances last year reached a record-high of
US$8.5 billion. The Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) estimated it
will total up to US$10 billion this year.
The Philippines is
the world’s third-largest recipient of remittances, after Mexico and
India. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has reported that in 2004
alone annual OFW remittances were three times larger than all the foreign
direct investment the Philippines receives.
Instead of the
banking channel, Bragas-Regalado said there are other means by which OFWs
can remit money to their families in the Philippines. These include the
door-to-door delivery services and “padalat” (hand-carried) through
fellow Filipinos returning to the country.
Migrante, however,
discourages OFWs from transacting with jueteng (illegal numbers
game) syndicates. Earlier reports revealed there are some OFWs already
doing this.
There is less charge
incurred in the door-to-door delivery channel, said Gina Esguerra, 34, a
former domestic in Hong Kong. She used to pay HK$20-35 in a bank-to bank
transaction while only about HK$10-15 in a door-to-door channel.
Treated unjustly
Bragas-Regalado said
that despite the pronouncements of the government that OFWs are the new
breed of heroes because they help keep the economy afloat, migrant workers
are actually treated unjustly by government.
She accused the
President of transferring over P530 million Overseas Workers’ Welfare
Administration (OWWA) Medicare Funds to Philhealth, another P100 million
OFW funds to the Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) and P100
million to the Land Bank of the Philippines. The transfers were ostensibly
for livelihood assistance for migrant workers and their families, and the
“ghost evacuation” of Filipinos in the Middle East during the U.S.
invasion of Iraq that reportedly cost the country US$253,500.
Aside from these,
Bragas-Regalado said that hundreds of migrant workers, mostly those
running away from their abusive employers, have been kept stranded in
their host countries such as Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Kuwait. Even
Filipino deportees from Sabah received no government assistance, citing
results of their recent fact-finding mission.
Citing a recent
statement from Health Secretary Francisco Duque, many Philhealth
card-holders are unaware that the health insurance will end this year
unless renewed. Philhealth cards were reportedly given free to almost
eight million poor Filipinos to boost the President’s candidacy in the May
2004 elections.
Faking OFWs
support
Meanwhile, the
Central Bank of the Philippines and government agencies said the “no
resign, no remit” campaign will not prosper. Yet, Bragas-Regalado said,
their actions show otherwise.
In Japan, just a few
days after Migrante International issued this call, Filipino groups under
the Migrante network received a faxed statement from the country’s
Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) asking for their support for the
embattled President.
Entitled, “Statement
of Support for President Arroyo,” the letter ends by saying “We call on
our fellowmen to rally behind President Arroyo, exercise sobriety, and
maintain respect for the Constitution and the rule of law.”
The Migrante-affiliated
groups, however, refused to sign and instead faxed a copy to the Migrante
International office in Quezon City.
Moreover, a source
whom Migrante International refused to identify revealed that about 100
consular officials will meet in the country on July 9 along with foreign
businessmen to give support to the administration.
The July 5 forum
discussed the paper “Impact of Remittances on the National Economy” by Lou
Roque, Executive Director of the International Migrants Resource Center (IMRC); “Graft
and Corruption” by Dr. Minguita Padilla, president of Sinag ng Bayan
Foundation; and “Remittances as a Form of Protest for Migrants” by
Bragas-Regalado.
Petitions and
statements from organizations in the United States,
Hong Kong,
Saudi Arabia, Japan and Canada were read and distributed during the forum.
Bulatlat
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