This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 10, April 15-21, 2007
MIGRANT WATCH
During times of
conflict, it is the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) who suffer. Two
OFWs who worked in Iraq proved that deployment bans are useless.
BY AUBREY SC
MAKILAN The
Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) has partially lifted the
ban on the deployment of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Nigeria and
Lebanon, after the hostage crisis and bombing incidents, respectively, in these
countries. And now, a
new alarm was raised over the continued
holding of the 15 British sailors in Iran. Although there are only about 200
Filipinos in Iran, the fear is for the estimated 1.5 to 1.8 million overseas
Filipino workers in the Middle East if a region-wide tension escalates. During times of conflict,
it is the OFWs who suffer. Two OFWs, who worked in
Iraq, proved that deployment bans are useless.
PART 2 - Noel Rebamba: Accidental Migrant
Worker Noel Rebamba was an
accidental migrant worker. He was just accompanying his father who was then
applying as a driver in Iraq in 2003. Upon seeing him, he was also encouraged by
the agency to apply, too. Though he was then driving
their FX as a public utility vehicle, he applied as a laundry man in Iraq.
“We know we will be
delivered to Iraq,” he said, despite the deployment ban in Iraq during the
invasion. Their batch leaving for
Iraq in December 2003 almost filled the plane, he said. In Kuwait, they were
about a thousand occupying a small-time condominium waiting deployment to Iraq.
Food, electricity, water, and accommodations are free. They were even given
“advanced money” which their leader himself almost pocketed. In his contract, Rebamba
said that although the name of their employer, the First Kuwaiti Trading
Company, was identified, it was not indicated that they will be deployed in
Iraq. He also learned that their main contractor was Kellogg, Brown & Root, the
engineering and construction arm of the Halliburton Company which provides
military support services. United States Vice President Dick Cheney was defense
secretary when the first Brown & Root study was done, and he became chief
executive of Halliburton when he retired. His father was deployed
first on Jan. 3, 2004 in Iraq. Rebamba was deployed in Camp Anaconda on Feb. 26,
2004. Camp Anaconda In Kuwait, Rebamba was
promoted as a translator, increasing his salary from $250 to $450. But in Camp
Anaconda, seniority complex demoted him, he said. Instead, he was asked to drive
a truck inside the camp and deliver the materials needed in setting up
facilities. “Ang trabaho ng pinoy
du’n, sila nagseserbisyo sa mga Kano du’n”
(The jobof Filipinos there is to be all-around errand boys for the Americans
there), he said, citing the works of repairing the air conditioner, cooking,
cleaning toilets, and serving as utility men. But with the abundance of
food and other supplies inside the camp, Rebamba said one could not imagine they
were in the middle of a war. They have ice cream, fruits, milk, and mineral
water. “Pabango lang namin sa
aircon ang mga orange at
apple”(We could afford to use oranges and apples as air fresheners),
he boasted. “Ang gatas nga ‘dun pwede mong ipaligo” (You could bathe with
the milk there). But the abundance of supply
could not diminish the feeling of longing for their loved ones. “(Ang)
cell site du’n, tiyempuhan, mga 3 a.m. kami
tumatawag sa ‘Pinas” (Cell sites there emit signals by fits, we could call
our relatives in the Philippines at around 3 a.m.), he lamented. He also complained that
their salary was being deducted by the agency, saying only almost $200 were left
to them. Because they could not go
out of the camp, they could only wait for fellow Filipinos whom they could ask
to send their money to their families in the Philippines. Although offering its
services, they do not trust the agency, which deducts so much from their salary,
to remit their money to their families. “Kapag ilang salin na ng
pagpapadalhan, ilang $5 din ang nababawas”
(They always deduct $5 from our salaries), said the regretful Rebamba. They were allowed to take a
vacation in Kuwait every quarter or convert the vacation into cash. So he would
choose the vacation so he could personally send money to his mother in the
Philippines. Danger “Kung mamamatay tayo,
mamamatay tayo kahit sa Pilipinas”
(If we are fated to die, we could die even in the Philippines). This became the
motto of the OFWs risking their lives in Iraq. “Ang buhay ng OFWs du’n
tsambahan lang” (OFWs there live their lives by chance). Migrant workers were only
briefed about the safety measures upon arrival in the camp, said Rebamba who
bought his own bullet-roof vest and helmet. He only feared possible aerial
poisoning which most of them have not been prepared from. In one incident, he was
about to deliver 200 pieces of aircon to another camp when something exploded in
Camp Anaconda. The generator was bombed. The explosion was so strong that
shrapnel the size of corn kernels passed through four double plywood-walled
rooms. In separate incidents,
Rebamba saw a fellow Filipino die while on a convoy, an OFW who got blind after
shrapnel penetrated his eyes, and another whose chest was pierced with shrapnel
fragments. When crossing an ambush
site to Camp Bacoba, Rebamba was just holding his breath. When he was in Camp Bacoba
transporting those who would clean the shower room of the soldiers, he almost
spilled his coffee with the tremor that a strong explosion caused. Outside the camp, they
found the car of a suicide bomber already on fire after US soldiers fired at it. In fear for his life, being
an unarmed man inside the camp, Rebamba once thought of joining the military. “Kung puwede lang may
hawak akong baril hahawak ako talaga”
(If only I’m allowed to get hold of a gun,I’d really get hold of one), he said.
But his application was denied because of age limitation. He was 32 years old
then and the U.S. soldiers told him they prefer those below 30 years of age. Lately, he learned that
Filipino security guards and ex-service men applying in Iraq were paid higher
salary. Underpaid and neglected When Rebamba was on his
vacation in Kuwait, the Philippine government heightened the deployment ban to
Iraq. Although there were others who were able to still cross to Iraq, Rebamba
was left in Kuwait. There, he complained for a salary adjustment. As a truck
driver and a translator, he insisted that $650 is not enough considering they
were in the middle of a war. He compared his salary to Nepali migrant workers
earning more than him but with less work load. Rebamba had only his
passport and a bag of clothes in Kuwait. The rest was left in Camp Anaconda.
Based on his contract, the company will shoulder their airfare costs back to the
Philippines once they were able to finish the two-year contract. Since he was
just in his four month, it was his family in the Philippines that sent the money
he could use to buy his ticket. Another problem was they
had no work visa, meaning they got there using a tourist visa only. “Kaya
kayang-kaya nilang gawin ‘yun sa amin (It’s very easy for them to do that to
us).I know there’s connivance there,” he lamented. Rebamba said they even
approached the Philippine embassy in Kuwait. Instead, he said they were the ones
blamed for their situation. “Imposibleng ‘di nila
alam ang job order, we’re almost 1,000 people, dumaan kami sa
process,” (It’simpossible for them not to have known of the job order, we’re
almost 1,000 people and we went through the process), explained Rebamba.”Ano
namang gagawin namin, magtu-tourist kami lahat ‘dun? Pulitika
talaga” (What would wedo, be all tourists there? There’s really politics
involved). For Rebamba, this problem
is deeply-rooted in the relations of the Philippines and the U.S. “Kunwari lang na hindi
alam ng government na nakakalusot ang mga Pinoy”
(The government just pretends it doesn’t know
that Filipinos can get through), he insisted. “Dahil (because) the
Philippines has a commitment to support America sa gera sa Iraq (in its
war on Iraq) dahil ally tayo n’yan, servant ng America
(because we are an ally, a servant of America).” “Talagang binenta kami
ng buhay dun, nakakadala” (We were
sold alive there, it was sickening), he said. He returned home on October
2004, never wanting to go back there and work again in that war-torn country. But any good offer would
change his mind. He said if he would be able to find a direct and fair employer,
he would not mind going back there as long as he would be fairly paid. But when asked if the pay
is worth the danger, his answer is still a big “No.” Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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Tales of Woe and Desperation in Iraq
Bulatlat