This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 9, April 1-7, 2007
ELECTION WATCH
Mock senatorial
election on April 8
As a mock election for
senators is set in Hong Kong, Filipino groups there fear a lower turnout
of voters compared to the 2004 elections, resulting in the
disenfranchisement of about 70 percent of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs)
in that country. BY
AUBREY SC MAKILAN As a mock election for
senators is set in Hong Kong, Filipino groups there fear a lower turnout of
voters compared to the 2004 elections, resulting in the disenfranchisement of
about 70 percent of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in that country. HK OFW voters The Hong Kong chapter of
the Gabriela Women’s Party (GWP-HK) said that there is a high probability of a
“low turnout of voters.” GWP-HK Chairperson Cynthia
Ca Abdon-Tellez said, “Disempowerment and disenfranchisement of OFWs” is
allegedly due to the failure of government to fully implement the Overseas
Absentee Voting (OAV). In the 2004 elections,
64,040 or 71 percent of the 89,903 registered voters actually voted, according
to GWP-HK. Data from the Commission on Elections (Comelec) show that 88,001 Hong
Kong-based Filipino migrants were registered as of April 27, 2004, making them
the most overseas registrants in the coming polls. According to the Commission
on Filipinos Overseas, there were 196,941 temporary and irregular overseas
Filipinos in Hong Kong in December 2004. This means that only 32.52 percent of
Hong Kong-based OFWs actually voted in May 2004, resulting in the
disenfranchisement of the remaining 67.48 percent. Incidentally, there are
about 120,000 OFWs in Hong Kong working as foreign domestic helpers (FDH),
according to the United Filipinos in Hong Kong (Unifil-HK). Telez added that only 22
precincts will be established by the PCG-HK for the month-long voting period, a
far cry from the more than 40 precincts set up and several satellite
registrations conducted during the 2004 elections. She said that the limited
number of precincts “can surely discourage many from voting due to the prospect
of using their day-off just to vote.” Meanwhile, a week before
OAV begins, a Filipino alliance of domestic workers will conduct a mock election
to gauge the sentiments of OFWs on the senatorial candidates. But with OFWs
“aggressively” telling their families to assess the candidates’ stand on OFW
issues when they vote on May 14, Villanueva said that these shall have a
significant impact on the electoral process. “The election is an arena where we
can raise our concerns and we shall surely use the upcoming polls to choose
candidates who, by record and by platform, shall advance the interests of OFWs
and our families.” In the 2004 elections, OFW
groups formed Migrante Sectoral Party (MSP) that is supposed to represent
migrant workers in the House of Representatives. However, MSP only got 110,507
or 0.87 percent of total votes cast in the party-list election, short of the
required two-percent requirement for one seat. In the coming May elections, GWP
has as its third nominee Flora Belinan who comes from the migrant sector.
Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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70% of Hong Kong
OFWs Fear Disenfranchisement in May Polls
Bulatlat
This year, Tellez said that even the Philippine Consulate General in Hong Kong (PCG-HK)
allegedly admitted an expected lower turnout of voters. “How can we expect any
improvement if government is the one instituting the limitations of the OAV with
the insufficient, and in some cases, nil, information and education drive among
OFWs as well as the insufficient human and logistical machinery for registration
and actual voting?”
According to Tellez, though OAV will run for a month, Filipino domestic helpers
will only have four days for the actual voting set to be held in a center
several kilometers away from the Central where thousands of Filipinos go on
their day-off.
GWP-HK also reported that the government allegedly lacks efforts for information
dissemination and education work in line with the May 14 elections. Problems
such as these, Tellez said, were already raised in the 2004 elections and in
fact, contained in the official Commission on Elections (Comelec) report.
Mock election
Eman Villanueva, Unifil-HK secretary-general and organizer of the activity, said
the mock election “shall give an insight on how Filipino overseas will likely
vote come election time.”
The activity, an initiative of Migrante International, will be an
internationally-coordinated effort. In Hong Kong, the mock election will be on
April 8, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., at Chater Road where at least 1,000 Hong Kong-based
Filipino voters are expected to participate.
Villanueva said that they are hoping that the senatorial candidates will address
issues confronting migrant workers like the new Philippine Overseas Employment
Administration guidelines, government fees, lack of services and protection and
the alleged anomalies at the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (Owwa). “We
challenge the candidates to prove their worth to the OFWs who have long been
denied our rightful say on policies and laws that impact on us and our
families.”
Migrant empowerment
“While OFWs celebrate the victory of finally being able to participate in the
elections through the OAV, the government’s blunders and failure to implement
the law are the biggest stumbling blocks for its full realization,” said Tellez.
Because of this, she said that the “empowerment of migrant workers remains a
distant dream and is just government propaganda.”