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Philippines
Arroyo administration abandons 30,000 Filipinos trapped in
Lebanon
By Dante Pastrana
15 August 2006
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An estimated 30,000 Filipino workers, mostly women employed
as domestic helpers, have been trapped in Lebanon during Israels
month-long offensive. According to the Philippine department of
foreign affairs, at least 2,000 were in southern Lebanon, which
has borne the brunt of the bombardment.
Less than 5,000 Filipinos had been evacuated when the UNs
ceasefire came into effect on Monday. President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyos administration failed to provide adequate assistance
to those caught in Lebanon. Only as Israel stepped up its ground
invasion of southern Lebanon and extended its aerial bombardment
to Beirut and northern Lebanon did the president finally issue
a mandatory evacuation order and call on Filipinos to leave
while the window for escaping is still open.
In what amounts to an indictment of social conditions in the
Philippines, many workers refused to leave the war zone, preferring
to keep their menial jobs in the Middle East rather than face
a life of desperate poverty in their native country. Most Filipinos
in Lebanon earn just $150 to $200 a month, but this is still 30
percent more than the minimum monthly wage in the Philippines.
Moreover, as many as 80 percent of Filipino workers in Lebanon
are believed to be undocumented and have neither Lebanese nor
Philippine working permits. Workers feared that evacuation would
leave them open to legal sanctions and prevent them from returning
to their jobs in Lebanon.
Israel, backed by the US, has created the disaster for the
people of Lebanon, including hundreds of thousands of foreign
workers. But Arroyo and her administration are also culpable for
the plight of the 30,000 Filipinos.
Throughout the conflict, the government issued no protests
to Tel Aviv, even as the bombardment blocked its evacuation plans.
Israels ongoing air and naval blockade of Lebanon, and destruction
of roads and bridges throughout the country, severely limited
the ability of Filipino workers to escape the conflict. At one
point, 800 workers were left camped inside a Catholic Church in
Beirut after Israeli missiles destroyed three major bridges on
the route to Damascus.
For weeks, the Philippine government, despite mounting concerns
from workers relatives and families, refused to issue an
evacuation order. The administration insisted that Filipinos were
not at risk in most of the country. On July 23, Vice President
Noli de Castro declared that Israeli specific precision
bombings meant civilians were not in imminent danger.
Officials even put a positive spin on the situation after Israel
began its bombardment of Beirut. Almost two weeks into Israels
offensive, Roy Cimatu, Filipino special envoy to the Middle East,
told the Sun Star Daily that life appeared normal in Beirut.
The banks and groceries are still open and traffic is still
heavy here, he declared.
These comments demonstrated Manilas abject subservience
to the Bush administration. For the government, the lives of vulnerable
and impoverished workers in Lebanon are worth far less than maintaining
the Filipino-US alliance.
Since September 11, Arroyo has been a loyal ally of Washingtons
bogus war on terror. She has backed an indefinite
deployment of US military personnel in the Philippine region of
Mindanao, to participate in joint military operations against
Islamist militants. And while ostensibly neutral during the 2003
US invasion of Iraq, the Arroyo administration quickly lined up
during the division of spoils, dispatching a military contingent
and sending workers to help build and operate five US military
bases in Iraq.
There are also economic calculations behind the governments
response. Nearly 8 million Filipinos are working around the world,
most in Asia and the Middle East. At least one million of these
are undocumented, and live in constant fear of being sacked, deported
or imprisoned. Migrant workers endure deplorable working and living
conditions and poverty-level wages.
According to figures from 2003, workers return $12 billion
every year to the Philippines. This money equates to more than
one-quarter of the countrys gross national product, or about
100 times the total foreign direct investment. The policy of exporting
cheap labour was first initiated by the dictator Ferdinand Marcos
in 1974, and has been maintained by his successors, including
the current president.
As well as collecting revenue from fees imposed on documented
workers remittances, the government welcomes the foreign
workers money as a means of avoiding taking responsibility
for providing adequate, publicly funded, education, health, and
welfare services.
See Also:
On eve of Lebanon ceasefire deadline:
US, Israel face political debacle
[14 August 2006]
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