PH to China: Legalize Status of 200K Filipino HSWs
MANILA: The Philippines will push for allowing Filipinos to work legally as household service workers (HSWs) in China, the labor and employment secretary, who will visit the mainland next month, has said.
Up to 200,000 of the domestic workers are currently working there illegally, South China Morning Post quoted Silvestre Bello III as saying.
Bello, who was in Hong Kong on Sunday, reportedly described the number of Filipino domestic helpers working illegally across the border as “alarming”, as he revealed plans to ask Beijing to legalize their status.
“I intend to pursue my plan to visit China, maybe Beijing, and talk to the authorities on how to legitimize the stay of our overseas workers and at the same time look at the possibilities of bringing in more workers under legitimate circumstances,” Bello reportedly said.
“After my visit to Oslo, I may join our president [Rodrigo Duterte] who earlier intimated to me his intention to visit China,” he added. “So it could be the end of October, unless he decides to go first to Saudi Arabia.”
While the Hong Kong government has for many years fully opened the door to maids from the Philippines, Indonesia and other countries, the mainland has a different policy.
It was only in July last year that Shanghai started to allow foreign residents to legally hire domestic helpers from overseas – Chinese citizens are not permitted to employ them. Only five maids had reportedly been approved to work in Shanghai by the end of last year, said the news portal.
And it is only since last month that expatriates, including people from Hong Kong and Taiwan, have been allowed to hire foreign domestic workers in Guangdong.
With the mainland’s affluent middle class and wealthy citizens seeking hired help at home, a worker at a Shanghai agency reportedly told the Post he had heard of cases of better-off mainlanders employing maids from overseas.
“Filipino maids are popular with some better-off mainland families because they want to give their children an English-speaking environment at home,” he reportedly said. “Compared to local [mainland] babysitters, they are more hard-working and more stable. They won’t need to take holidays during Lunar New Year.”
Reportedly, it costs about 8,000 to 10,000 yuan a month to hire a foreign maid, he said.
Bello was quoted as saying that he believed the Chinese government was resistant to opening up the market because that would mean fewer job opportunities for mainlanders who work as domestic helpers. But he countered that the market in the mainland was big enough to accommodate the Filipino maids already working there.
Meanwhile, the labor department chief quoted his Hong Kong counterpart Matthew Cheung Kin-chung as telling him after a Friday meeting that the city would consider sparing maids from high-rise window-cleaning duties after several plunged to their deaths this year.
“A ban is not easy to implement, and also you have to remember, to look at the practical side of the issue. The more immediate thing to do is to educate, promote and remind everybody concerned, the employers and employees that you have to be careful,” Cheung was quoted as saying by SCMP.
Photo credit: Rappler
(Source: FilipinoTimes.ae)