Tuesday, March 18, 2008

AIDS Festival 2008


St John’s Cathedral HIV Education Centre is launching the AIDS Festival 2008 on 30 March, with the theme “Take the Lead, Stop AIDS – Universal Action Now!”


The spreading of AIDS is obvious and undeniable, with patient numbers surging increasingly. According to the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), there were already 30 million HIV-infected patients worldwide in 2007.


The AIDS Festival this year aims to increase public awareness of AIDS, encouraging nations’ harmony. It is also modelled by social leaders to confront HIV/AIDS through prevention, support and care.


The event will start at 11.00 a.m. on 30 March, 2008; the grand ceremony will be launched at 3.00 p.m. There will be twenty six groups of participants from various organizations, schools etc. performing at the event. We are looking forward to seeing you with us at this meaningful occasion.



AIDS Festival 2008


Date : 30 March, 2008.

Time : 11.00 a.m. – 5. 30 p.m.

Venue : Sunday Pedestrian Precinct, Chater Road,

Central, Hong Kong

(outside the Legislative Council Building)



For any enquiries, please feel free to contact:


Ms. Elijah FUNG
AIDS Festival Coordinator

St. John's Cathedral HIV Education Centre
4-8 Garden Road, Central, Hong Kong
Tel: (852) 2523 0531
Fax: (852) 2523 1581
Cell: (852) 9048 4645
Email:
manager@sjhivctr.com
Website: www.sjhivctr.com

Monday, March 17, 2008

Immigration uncovers illegal outsourcing

IPOH: The Immigration Department has uncovered a new business approach being used by several employment agencies in Perak.

Instead of sourcing, supplying and managing foreign workers directly for their clients, some employment agencies here have appointed a local company to outsource and manage these workers on their behalf.

With this method, the agencies are not only able to lower their administrative costs, but also receive parts of the profits gained by the outsourcing company.

Yesterday, after checking the premises of an outsourcing company in Lahat Baru near here, the Immigration officials were shocked to find that there was more to the practice.

The raiding team, headed by the department's enforcement director, Datuk Ishak Mohamad, discovered that the foreign workers supplied by the company were illegals issued with Myanmar refugee cards.
"We found the cards issued by an outfit known as Burma Refugees Organisation (BRO). Malaysia does not accept refugee card as a valid travel document to enter this country."

"Therefore, workers supplied by the outsourcing company to the employment agencies' clients are illegals," he said here yesterday, adding that 99 passports belonging to Myanmar and Bangladesh nationals were also seized from the premises.

He said the outsourcing company, HRO Management, and the employment agencies were involved in an unlawful venture. The law, he said, prohibited employment agencies from delegating their business tasks to other companies who were not authorised to source, supply and manage foreign workers.

Ishak said based on initial investigation, there were at least five agencies which had agreements with HRO to outsource foreign workers for their clients.

He said HRO, a registered company run by a 55-year-old businessman, and the employment agencies could be charged in court for conducting illegal business while employers may face the music for harbouring illegals at their workplace.

He also said the department would investigate BRO, which is based in Puchong, Selangor, for issuing the illegal refugee cards, adding that the licences of the employment agencies involved would be suspended.

The raiding team also arrested three Myanmars at the premises, one of whom carried a refugee card issued by BRO.

The other two, employed as office boys by the outsourcing company, were arrested because their work passes stated that their employment was based in Kuala Lumpur and not in Ipoh.

Friday, March 14, 2008

No more Sri Lankan housemaids to Middle East?


By Gagani Weerakoon

The government has taken a decision to stop sending Sri Lankan women as housemaids to Middle East countries.

Ministry of Foreign Employment Development and Welfare said this was told at a meeting with the President and ministry secretaries at the Temple Trees yesterday.

“Instead of sending housemaids to labour in foreign countries President Mahinda Rajapaksa asked us to promote and send trained females as prospective nurses and attendants where they can earn more with due respect,” a Ministry spokesperson said.

Meanwhile, a project has been initiated to send more workers for jobs in construction and engineering services in Doha and Qatar.

Under this the Ministry of Construction and Engineering Services has already begun a project of constructing 345 houses in Doha and Qatar worth Rs 13 billion.

According to the Ministry measures are already underway to send a crew of 1000 including engineers, architects, surveyors, planners and other technicians.

Minister Rajitha Senaratne said these people were given good salaries, accommodation and other facilities and added that the amount of expected foreign income was more than double of what the country got at present.


Monday, March 10, 2008

UN News Service: Myanmar, migrant workers on agenda as UN labour policy group convenes

6 March 2008 – Forced labour in Myanmar, freedom of association and discrimination against migrant workers are among the issues to be addressed at the policy meeting of the United Nation’s labour organization that opens today in Geneva.

The Governing Body of the International Labour Office (ILO) meets three times a year in March, June and November, and takes decisions on policy, budget and the agenda of its International Labour Conference.

The meeting scheduled from 6-20 March is expected to discuss action against forced labour in Myanmar in the light of a recent ILO mission to the country, among other issues. It will also review progress in countries which have not yet ratified all fundamental Conventions on freedom of association and collective bargaining, forced and child labour and discrimination.

On 17 March, Robert B. Zoellick, President of the World Bank, will address the Working Party on the Social Dimension of Globalization, speaking on the topic, “The Challenge of Making Globalization Inclusive.”

Empowerment of women: Who cares?

Daily Mirror

By Manel Abhayaratna

March 11, 2008: Women constitute a little more than half the population of Sri Lanka and should play a more crucial role in the affairs of the country but another International day for women has come and gone and except for a lot of hype, functions and celebrations nothing constructive seems to have been achieved. The president taking the theme for International women’s Day this year "Shaping Progress" said that ‘is timely in the attention it draws to the need to build on the progress already made by women to move towards further and necessary achievements. On this day, it will be useful to think of the areas in which more action is still needed such as equal pay for equal work, women's education and health, and violence against women’. With such a statement concluded the international day. Women from different strata of society asked for their comments on the significance of the day cynically replied that it would not in anyway make much difference to their lives.

Their attitude perhaps reflects the failure of women themselves to unite and seek a solution to the myriad problems they face, the harassments that affect their domestic and working life, the sacrifices they make and the callousness with which they are treated by successive governments. The political empowerment of women in Sri Lanka was a first in the Asian countries. In fact the world’s first woman prime Minister was from Sri Lanka and the former president was also a woman. But essentially it appears that this political power did not have any impact on the well being of women in the country. It neither indicated a high political profile for the average woman, nor did it represent the involvement of women in policy-planning and decision-making at higher levels. Obviously women did not find solace for their problems by being active in politics, in fact even those few women who entered the arena of politics remained divided according to their political loyalties, and they did not unite as one voice when concerns of women became a matter of importance. Women politicians at almost every level supported their political affiliations regardless of planning and working for the common good of women. Common issues affecting women seldom surface in parliament or in local government institutions though some of these institutions are headed by women. For instance, maternal nutrition is important during pregnancy, both for the development of the fetus and for the protection of the mother’s health. Poor maternal health leads to low birth weight leaving some babies malnourished right from birth. Girls that are born with low birth rate grow into women of short stature, who themselves are more likely to have low birth weight babies. But on the average the standards of nutrition that prevail especially in the rural and marginalized shanty areas not only fail to meet their own needs but hinder their efforts to ensure the health of their children.

Malnutrition of mothers and children are a common feature in this country. But women politicians have not highlighted this situation nor expressed any opinion about the effect the high cost of living has on the family. The increased cost of milk foods, eggs and essential food items especially cereals such a dhall, green grams etc which could be nutrient substitutes are issues that should have been of concern. Sadly only a few women’s organizations appear to be concerned about such issues and even they are limited in their protest, and as for the women politicians specifically it appears that their silence is golden. In fact the rural and the marginalized women would certainly have been appreciative if some protest was made and action taken to at least provide some relief to them. Women politicians would surely understand the sufferings and frustration that these women undergo.
Moreover we have an NGO forum of women’s organizations, one wonders whether they could not mobilize from grass root level activists who could agitate for a more rational price level for essential food items. Perhaps they could provide forums for discussion and platforms for lobbying, and form small groups to pressurize politicians especially women politicians to agitate for some type pf relief. It should be recalled that after the inception of the International Women’s day rallies, in 1917 Russian women successfully demonstrated for peace and bread , perhaps we can have as a rallying point a slogan peace and food!. After all in his message the President referred to the progress that has yet to be made concerning women’s development, in that context is not peace in the country and food at affordable prices for the people issues of the highest priority?

Women workers contribution to the economy
More importantly, the country's economy rests to a very large part on the contributions provided by women. While women’s labour plays an important part in the plantation industry the contributions made by migrant women workers in the Middle Eastern countries should be regarded with greater appreciation and concern.

A matter of utmost importance is that women especially those at decision making levels and the NGO forum should consider is the lack of political rights for these thousands of women who migrate abroad for domestic work. Successive governments have acknowledged their repatriated earnings form the second largest source of foreign exchange earnings for Sri Lanka. These migrant women are exposed to numerous exploitations, physical harm, denial of basic human and labour rights and freedoms, and the lack of access to legal or counselling services in the countries they work in, but far worse than all these is that their own country denies them their right to vote. Surely it needs only a logistical planning to provide them the facilities to cast their vote but no-one appears to be bothered about this denial of their basic fundamental right.

Their earnings which are of such importance to the country are obtained by immense sufferings and sacrifice and the end result they receive is a denial of their political right to vote. In addition while these women go through the trauma of working as migrant workers in a foreign country which has its own codes of behaviour and rules .to improve the economic status of their families, the unsupervised children of these migrant workers are often exposed to the undesirable influences, which impact them negatively. Here again those women who are in the political field and who have thereby to make a more positive impact should unite together regardless of the political party affiliations and plan out a more effective programme to assist the children of these migrant workers.

The pitiful work conditions that affect the migrant women workers and a number of women the garment industry seems to be nobody's concern .Both these groups of workers bring into the country the much needed foreign exchanges as also does the tea plantation worker. Sri Lanka earned Rs.76.6 billion (about US$1.5 billion) in 1994 from garment exports produced mainly in the Free Trade Zones (FTZ) in the country - which made up 48% of its export income. Out of the 100,000 jobs created in the FTZs in recent years, 80% have gone to women. There are 500,000 migrant workers, mainly in the Middle-East, who contributed Rs.35 billion (US$ 0.7 billion) to the national coffers in 1994 - over 50% of them are women, working as maids It could be seen that though the woman's role in the economy and in society has become more and more important, her position is still vulnerable. There is no clear and general identification and recognition of women's rights and a women’s charter seems as elusive as ever. The previous UNP government published a women's charter embodying various women's rights recognized internationally.

Women’s Charter
The present PA government, pledged at the elections in 1994 to legalize that charter. However, no action has been taken in that regard, despite there being a Women's Empowerment Ministry headed by a woman politicaisn. The Minister of Child Development nd Women's Empowerment has as its objectives the implementation of policies, plans and programmes in respect of Women’s Empowerment and the implementation of policies and programmes for; the advancement of quality of life for women; increase of their participation in National development Policies and other spheres of life; The promotion of gender equity and gender justice and the implementation of the Women’s Charter. But in reality most of these objectives are seldom realized and no one is really bothered about the actual empowerment of women to carve out their own development. They yet remain as is stated in the UN document, discriminated against and this violation of ‘ the principles of equality of rights and respect for human dignity, is an obstacle to the participation of women, on equal terms with men, in the political, social, economic and cultural life of their countries and hampers the growth of the prosperity of society and the family and makes more difficult the full development of the potentialities of women in the service of their countries and of humanity’

Over 200 Migrant Workers Dead Over Last Three Years

The Korea Times
By Kim Tae-jongStaff Reporter
A total of 217 foreign workers have died here over the last three years with about half of their deaths attributed to heart attacks and other sudden causes. Of those, 104 were confirmed to have died from heart attacks, strokes or sleeping disorders, Gwangju Immigration Center at the Borderless Village said, citing data from Samsung Life Insurance which sells policies to migrant workers. Accidents and other factors were attributed to other causes death.
"Such a large portion of sudden deaths reflects poor working and living conditions of foreign workers,'' An Dea-hwan, head of the center, said. "There should be some countermeasures to prevent such tragedies.''
Samsung Life analyzed data from April, 2005 to February, 2008. On top of poor working conditions, the lack of medical treatment resulted in fatalities, An said. But the official said that the situation could be a lot worse than the official data, considering the cases of illegal foreign workers in even worse conditions. "The actual death toll could be much higher as illegal migrant workers are not even taken into consideration in these figures,'' An said. As of March, there were a total of 230,000 illegal immigrants reported in the nation who remain uninsured. "They work for too long hours under poor working conditions, 12 hours without rest and seven days a week,'' the official said. "They can't take a shower properly at their flat. Given this, a tragic result is not a surprise.''