黑料社

High expectation on DMW: More convictions for human traffickers

Repatriation flights continue for OFWs who are stranded abroad because of various reasons, including COVID restrictions in their places of work. FILE PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines鈥擧uman trafficking and illegal recruitment continue to prey on Filipinos hoping for a better future abroad but hope is rising that these monsters lurking in the dark would finally meet their match in a new department created solely for overseas Filipino workers (OFW).

Republic Act No. 11641鈥攐r the Department of Migrant Workers Act鈥攚as signed by President Rodrigo Duterte on Dec. 30, 2021 and was welcomed by the Coalition Against Trafficking of OFWs (CAT-OFWs), an organization composed of representatives from civil society and the private sector with technical advice and support from the ASEAN-Australia Counter Trafficking (ASEAN-ACT).

Under the new law, the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) will absorb all powers, functions, and mandates of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) and will serve as the core agency under the executive branch of the government tasked with protecting the rights and promoting the welfare of OFWs.

The creation of a department dedicated to OFWs was among Duterte鈥檚 campaign promises during the 2016 presidential race. Election results showed massive support for Duterte by OFWs.

In May last year, Duterte certified as urgent the long-promised measure that sought to create the Department of Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos (DMWOF), which was then still pending at the Senate as Bill No. 2334.

READ: Duterte certifies as urgent bill creating dep鈥檛 for migrant workers, overseas Filipinos

According to former labor undersecretary Susan Ople, one of the founders of the CAT-OFWs, the measure鈥檚 鈥渃lear and tough mandate鈥 of pursuing cases against human trafficking syndicates and illegal recruiters allows the new department to place human trafficking and illegal recruitment issues at the top of its list of priorities.

The coalition said it expects to see an increase in the government鈥檚 human trafficking conviction rate under the new department.

DMW鈥檚 mandate on human trafficking

The DMW is also mandated to 鈥渇ormulate, plan, coordinate, promote, administer, and implement policies, and undertake systems for regulating, managing, and monitoring OFWs鈥 and their reintegration while taking into consideration the national development programs formulated by the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda).

The law also aims to empower and train OFWs to help them gain appropriate skills and ensure continuous access to training and knowledge development for OFWs鈥攚hich could help empower and protect Filipinos working outside the country.

As part of its functions, the DMW is set to 鈥渋nvestigate, initiate, sue, pursue, and help prosecute鈥 human trafficking and illegal recruitment cases, in cooperation with the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT).

The DMW will also sit as a member of the IACAT.

Through this function, the department secretary and the authorized deputy will have the power to:

鈥淲ith this very clear mandate, we expect a sharper focus on the investigation and prosecution of human traffickers and their accomplices in and outside government that prey on our OFWs forcing them into a life of slavery overseas,鈥 said Luther Calderon, a non-government organization (NGO) leader and member of CAT-OFWs, in a statement.

The law also stated that the DMW, as part of its long list of powers and functions, must:

The new department is set to cover, assist, and protect the estimated 2.2 million OFWs abroad鈥攁ccording to results of the 2019 Survey on Overseas Filipinos by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) released in 2020.

Blacklisting

The CAT-OFWs likewise pushed for a provision under Section 6 of RA 11641, which enables the DMW to 鈥渃reate a system for the blacklisting of persons, both natural and juridical, including local and foreign recruitment agents, and employers, who are involved in trafficking.鈥

Graphic: Ed Lustan

The provision stated that the department shall have a database of blacklisted persons, which will be updated and shared within the DMW鈥檚 agencies and the IACAT. A monitoring system for cases involving trafficking and illegal recruitment should also be established.

鈥淚t鈥檚 crystal clear that the new OFW department is mandated to pursue cases against those who treat our overseas workers as slaves and commodities for sale,鈥 said the CAT-OFWs leaders in a statement.

鈥淚t is also tasked with creating and updating a database of blacklisted persons to be shared with IACAT while also establishing a monitoring system for cases involving trafficking and illegal recruitment,鈥 they added.

By the numbers

Human trafficking, as defined by the United Nations (UN), refers to the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, or receipt of people through force, fraud, or deception, with the aim of exploiting them for profit.

Graphic: Ed Lustan

Graphic: Ed Lustan

A study by Alcestis 鈥淭hetis鈥 Abrera Mangahas, former deputy regional director of International Labor Organization (ILO) for Asia Pacific, released last year revealed that illegal recruitment鈥攚hich can be caused by unlicensed agencies or prohibited practices by licensed agencies鈥攚as one of the biggest struggles encountered and reported by OFWs.

Graphic: Ed Lustan

Data from the IACAT OFW Task Force showed that it has assisted 2,294 women domestic workers, investigated 233 cases, and filed 10 criminal cases and 10 administrative cases鈥攚hich resulted in three landmark convictions in Bahrain, Malaysia, and the Philippines.

The DOJ reported 25 convictions of human trafficking cases during the first half of 2021. Of these convictions recorded from Jan. 1 to June 30 last year, there were 28 human traffickers involved.

Graphic: Ed Lustan

A total of 73 victims were involved in the cases, of whom 57 were minors while 16 were adults.

The numbers, however, were 73 percent lower than the 92 convictions recorded during the same period in 2020. At least 85 human traffickers, who victimized 231 individuals, including 149 minors, were jailed that year.

Justice Undersecretary Emmeline Aglipay-Villar explained that some courts have failed to submit reports mid-year, while others submit very late.

According to POEA director Levinson Alcantara, the agency has offered assistance in the preparation of the following complaints against licensed agencies for recruitment violations:

It has also docketed hundreds of illegal recruitment cases during the past three years, including:

READ: Illegal recruiters know no pandemic, continue to prey on OFWs

POEA Administrator Bernard Olalia previously said that due to illegal recruitment, human trafficking, and unethical recruitment by unscrupulous firms, the agency has formed a technical working group (TWG) on fair and ethical recruitment.

Graphic: Ed Lustan

鈥淲ith the help of different stakeholders, this TWG is tasked to assess existing policies and rules and regulations in fair and ethical recruitment with the end view of formulating a policy framework that will be implemented by the POEA,鈥 Olalia said.

However, key findings of the study 鈥淪eeking Justice: Developing Improved OFW Feedback and Complaints Mechanisms鈥 suggested that the recorded cases involving human trafficking and illegal recruitment could still increase since only a handful of OFW victims usually report to the authorities and seek help.

READ: OFW burden grows heavier as relief, justice fall through system gaps

鈥淥FWs often find it untenable to seek justice under the destination country鈥檚 hardly understood institutions and fragmented laws and policies, especially when confronted with unfriendly immigration and work permit processes,鈥 explained Mangahas at an online press conference last year.

Citing data from the 2018 National Migration Survey, Mangahas said that among OFWs who experienced contract violations and involuntary work arrangements, only a third sought help.

From those who sought help, only a few filed a complaint or case against their employer.

鈥淭here is the disturbing sense of helplessness and resignation among the respondents, an acceptance that taking action would not result in significant positive change,鈥 said Mangahas.

High expectations

Ople had expressed concerns previously that the push for a new department solely for migrant workers and OFWs might not be able to meet high expectations.

READ: Gov鈥檛 told: Protect OFWs, new department against corruption

鈥淭he expectations of our migrant workers will be so high so it鈥檚 very important to level the people鈥檚 expectation of what this new department can accomplish,鈥 she explained.

She has also urged the government to review existing grievance mechanisms for exploited migrant workers during Senate deliberations on the new department.

鈥淭here has to be a clear mandate for this new department to make use of the laws of other countries and relevant international agreements to hold abusive foreign employers and foreign recruitment agencies accountable for exploiting our OFWs,鈥 Ople said.

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