This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 49, January 22-28, 2006
MIGRANT WATCH
Canadian Gov't Rejects Call to Stop Deportation of Filipino Caregivers In
Canada, 95 percent of those under the live-in caregive program are Filipino women. Some
of them are now being threatened with deportation due to failure to comply with
the rules set by the Canadian government which even its citizens find unjust.
Not surprisingly, concerned groups and individuals in Canada have shown
solidarity with the beleaguered Filipino live-in caregivers by organizing a
national day of protest last Friday the 13th. BY
SIKLAB ONTARIO TORONTO - The office of
Citizenship and Immigration Minister Joe Volpe refused to receive a petition
signed by some 1,000 people from across Canada demanding a stop to the unjust
deportation of Filipino live-in caregivers. Chanting, “Migrants’ rights
are human rights! Stop the deportation of Filipino live-in caregivers!” some 40
activists and sympathizers led by Siklab-Ontario (National Alliance of Filipino
Migrant Workers in Canada; siklab is Filipino word for flare) brought the
petitions as they held a protest action in front of Volpe’s campaign
headquarters on Avenue road last January 13. The protest was part of the
National Day of Protest against the unjust deportation of Filipino live-in
caregivers. Similar mass actions were done in Montreal and Vancouver. With instructions from the
minister’s headquarters, police officers earlier tried to dissuade organizers
from holding the protest, saying the minister was not in the office and that
“only volunteers are there and they cannot take anything you want delivered to
the minister.” The protesters however stood their ground and proceeded with the
militant but peaceful mass action. Siklab-Ontario was joined
by members of the Philippine Women Centre, the Filipino-Canadian Youth Alliance
(UKPC-Toronto), the Community Alliance for Social Justice (CASJ) and friends
from the Justice for Jeffrey (J4J) Coalition, Intercede, the Ontario Coalition
Against Poverty (OCAP), the People’s Front and No One is Illegal campaign. Reading from her
organization's statement, Siklab Vice Chairperson Yolyn Valenzuela said, “In the
last six years alone, 95 percent who came under the live-in caregiver program (LCP)
were Filipino women thus highlighting the need by Canada for cheap labour and
the ‘forced’ migration of Filipino women. We are hailed as ‘modern-day heroes,’
but in fact, we are ‘modern-day slaves.’ The government does not take into
account the oppressive working and living conditions of live-in caregivers.
Instead, it penalizes live-in caregivers with its inhumane implementation of an
exploitative and racist policy. Canada must be held accountable to the thousands
of live-in caregivers who toil under the LCP.” Live-in caregivers are
subject to arbitrary and unjust deportation for failure to complete the
requirements of the LCP. “In the majority of cases, the deportations are due to
the live-in caregiver’s inability to complete the required 24 months of live-in
work within three years of entering Canada,” says Cynthia Palmaria of the
Philippine Women Centre of Ontario. “Citizenship and Immigration Canada also
tricks the caregivers through the expansion of its temporary worker program.
Some live-in caregivers facing deportation were given an extension of their
working visas, not under the LCP but under the temporary worker program, thus
depriving them of the chance to apply for permanent residency.” Now running for reelection,
CIC Minister Volpe last year promised to review the LCP in order to address the
urgent issues arising from it. To date, Siklab claimed, there has been no
review, but only lip service made by an administration “adamantly refusing to
take responsibility for its policies.” LCP affects children,
too “But the impact of the LCP
does not fall on the women alone. It also affects their children.” Grace
Montesclaros of the Ugnayan ng Kabataang Pilipino sa Canada (UKPC or Filipino-Canadian
Youth Alliance-Toronto chapter) stressed, “If the live-in caregivers have
children who are born in Canada, these children – who are Canadian citizens –
face permanent separation from their mothers.” Children whose mothers have lost
their immigration status in Canada are denied access to benefits such as medical
care, housing, welfare and subsidized child care even though they are Canadian
citizens. She added, “In our
community, there is a disturbing trend of youth dropping out of high school.
Many children of domestic workers end up working in low-paying, service or
factory work jobs just like their parents. This is especially true of those who
are forced to drop out of high school. And children of domestic workers are not
exempt from racial profiling of Filipino youth by police. As an organization
fighting for the rights and welfare of Filipino Canadian youth, we view the
impact of the LCP as an urgent issue as they affect the youth – and hence, the
future – of our community.” CASJ Chairperson Edwin
Mercurio recalled Volpe’s statement at a Philippine Independence Day Council
gala night in Toronto where the CIC minister said that the “Filipino caregivers
are the backbone and modern-day heroes of Canadian society.” Mercurio said that
ironically, these “modern-day heroes” are ignored whenever they call for help to
stem the tide of systemic abuse committed against them by their employers.
Research conducted by CASJ and the National Alliance of Philippine Women in
Canada revealed that caregivers continue to be exploited, abused, assaulted,
raped and in many cases fired when they get sick or pregnant. Worse, they are
unjustly deported. In April 2005, Siklab
launched this campaign calling for a moratorium on deportation of Filipino
live-in caregivers. The issue had been raised since then to the attention of CIC
Minister Joe Volpe through a formal letter; but no reply was received addressing
the community’s concerns. “The Philippine government
does not help them either,” Mercurio adds. “All that the Philippine government
wants is the overseas Filipino workers’ remittances reaching some US$10.3
billion in 2005 that help keep the Philippine economy afloat.” “On the other hand, the
Canadian government continues to wash its hands when confronted with data and
statistics, documented case studies and valid complaints about rampant abuse,
exploitation by their employers and the Canadian government’s lack of legal,
medical, housing and educational support for participants of the LCP,” he said. Continuing action In Montreal, a mixed group
of over 20 community supporters and members of Siklab-Montreal gathered outside
the metro station in the heart of the Filipino community as passers-by signed
petitions. An information forum was held later in the evening attended by 40
members of the community. The national day of protest
ended in Vancouver with a vigil-rally for live-in caregivers already unjustly
deported from Canada outside the regional headquarters of CIC. Over 80 people
gathered, holding candles while listening to representatives from the
International League of People's Struggle (ILPS), the National Alliance of
Philippine Women in Canada, as well as representatives from the Public Service
Alliance of Canada, and the Hospital Employees Union. Paying tribute to those
women who had been forcibly deported from Canada over the last few years, Siklab-Canada
vowed to continue calling for an end to the unjust deportation of Filipino
live-in caregivers and the scrapping of the LCP. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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Contributed to BulatlatPlight of
Filipino live-in caregivers
Philippine and Canadian governments called to task