Sponsored Links
Tera Gold
Dresses
Diablo 3 Gold
China Wholesale
Bluetooth Headset
Fashion Bridal Dresses
HOME     |     LATEST STORIES     |     OPINION & ANALYSIS     |     SPECIAL REPORTS     |     MULTIMEDIA     Video     Slideshow     Audio/Podcasts     Webcasts
May 26, 2012
Manila, Philippines
Support progressive journalism.
Donate to Bulatlat.
SLIDESHOW Women slam Aquino’s inaction on price hikes
VIDEO On Labor Day, Workers call on Aquino to implement pro-people policies
STREET SHOOTER
Street Shooter: Sunrise at Sunset
SALUNGGUHIT Salungguhit: The face of poverty and struggle
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Photo of the week: Weight-lifting
TOP STORIES
GPH set to terminate peace talks with NDFP next year – NDFP’s Agcaoili
Dismissed union leaders ask RMN to be true to its branding
Suspect in abduction of Jonas Burgos shows no proof of alibi
OPINION
People’s lawyering goes a long way back in history
Intensive care
Crowning revelation
MUST-READS
KMP warns vs loopholes in SC decision on Luisita distribution
Anti-mining campaign gaining ground in Ilocos
Five years of searching for Jonas Burgos
BROWSE BY SECTION OR SUBJECT
Politics
Economy
Human Rights
OFWs & Migration
Agrarian Reform
Labor & Employment
Urban Poor
Environment
Education
Youth
Indigenous Peoples
Women & Children
Health
Media
Culture
Poetry
Analysis & Opinion
Regions
International
Democratic Space
Press Releases
Downloads


From Dubai to Manila, an OFW’s Harrowing Tale of Abuse and Betrayal

Published on May 23, 2009

By JANESS ANN J. ELLAO
Migrant Watch
Bulatlat

MANILA — In the 1970s, many engineers and skilled workers left the country to work in the Middle East. The Marcos administration exported the country’s skilled labor as a Band-Aid solution to the growing unemployment in the Philippines. Three decades later, the wound seemed to have never healed; the government continues to export its workers to boost the economy.

Today, more women are now leaving the country to work abroad such as domestic workers and health professionals as the demand for land-based migrant workers has dramatically shifted from men to women.

Maricar Evangelista, 35, a mother of four children, is one of the millions of Filipinos who left the country to find work abroad. Her story, of course, is also similar to the thousands of women migrant workers who have returned home after experiencing various forms of abuses from their employers.

Evangelista left the country last November 2007 to work as a domestic helper in Dubai. “I never thought my employers would maltreat me,” she said.

Evangelista said her employers were good to her during the first six months. But when the family decided to hire another domestic helper, her suffering started. “My fellow domestic helper who is also a Filipina went out on a date. My employer thought that I was her accomplice. We are both Filipino women so our employer thought that we are the same,” she said.

“I was slapped by my employer and they threw a chair at me,” Evangelista told Bulatlat. Evangelista’s first employer eventually sent her back to her agency in Dubai. But just as she thought her ordeal was over, she realized that another one was yet to begin, only much worse.

The manager of Evangelista’s agency Al Dookhi Labor Supply, a certain Dana, was very disappointed upon learning about Evangelista’s dismissal from her first employer. Dana then tried to send her again to other families based in Dubai who were looking for domestic helpers. But on three occasions, Evangelista was dismissed again weeks after she was employed for reasons that she did not know.

Each time Evangelista was employed, she would give her first salary to her agency. But since she was always dismissed weeks after she started working, Evangelista did not have the chance to save money for herself.

“They locked me up inside the agency for a month. The meal they served in the morning was supposed to last me the whole day,” Evangelista said.

“I have already told my brother about my situation in Dubai,” she said. Evangelista is the sister of Randy Evangelista, public information officer of Anakpawis (Toiling Masses) party list. When the agency learned about her calls, it confiscated her cellphone.

“I left many cellphones at the agency because they kept on confiscating it so I would not be able to call my family,” she said.

But Evangelista said that her agency found a way to further demoralize her. She claimed that it was responsible for spreading rumors that she was having an extramarital affair in Dubai. She said the agency blackmailed her by bribing two Filipino women under their agency to tell her family about her so-called infidelity. She said she helped these women to find a way to go home by helping them contact their families. When the two were about to go home, the agency talked to them and bribed them to spread the rumor about her when they reach the Philippines. Evangelista said that she even prioritized them before herself. “I was the one who was left there and this was what happened to me in return,” she said.

“The only thing that I can say about her [Dana] is that she is greedy. She was able to get people to her side because she has the money.”

Group effort

Last October 2008, Evangelista and a fellow migrant worker broke the glass window of the agency to escape their dreadful circumstances and sought the help of the Overseas Workers’ Welfare Administration. “It was the only way we could escape,” she said. The two of them were charged with robbery but the case was later dismissed for lack of evidence.

Meanwhile, her brother Randy looked for various ways to keep his sister from the hands of her cruel agency. He sought the advice of Migrante International and Gabriela on how to immediately bring her sister back home. “We also asked Villar to help us raise the money for Maricar’s plane fare,” Randy said, referring to Sen. Manuel Villar, who has packaged his public image as a savior of OFWs.

Randy said that while his sister was in the custody of OWWA, some concerned Filipinos constantly checked on Maricar’s situation. He also told Bulatlat that the safe return of her sister Maricar to the Philippines is a “group effort” of all progressive groups that he had approached for help.

Pages: 1 2

RELATED CONTENT

Three OFWs Die in Dubai Fire

ARTICLE TOOLS
Printer-Friendly Version Printer-Friendly Version

TAGS
, , , , , , ,
CATEGORIES
REPRINT
Feel free to reprint, repost or republish this material. (Read Bulatlat's syndication policy.)

2 Responses to “From Dubai to Manila, an OFW’s Harrowing Tale of Abuse and Betrayal”

  1. Russel Yusores Says:

    Good day! I'm Russel Yusores from Buhay Overseas.com, I would like to have your permission for us to republish this article on our site within this url – http://www.buhayoverseas.com/index.php?board=65.0 , also we are asking permission for us to republish more of your site's articles on our site. Hoping for your quick reply. Thank you.

  2. Social networks – giant psycho clinic « Freedom of Expression in the Digital Age Says:

    [...] She knew better what I am talking about. It is known that Philippine women are often subjects of torture in Arab houses and hotels where they work as a maids. Then I discovered a very intriguing fact: [...]

Leave a Comment

HUMAN RIGHTS
Groups score continuing rights abuses as Philippines undergoes review by UN body
Rights groups to file complaint vs Aquino administration
Victim files opposition to promotion of military torturers
MIGRANTS
Family questions circumstances surrounding death of OFW in Singapore
Actress Jodi Sta. Maria joins Migrante in demanding justice for OFW killed in Mongolia
Migrante sounds alarm against illegal deportation of OFW trade union leader from South Korea
LABOR
Violations of workers’ rights, getting worse – rights group
Radio network employees gear for strike against union-busting
Workers call labor department’s order against contractualization ‘a hoax’
NEWS IN PICTURES


Filipinos join protests against NATO in Chicago, US (Photo by Brett Jelinek / Bulatlat.com)

REGIONS
Environmentalists hail Baguio City’s ‘ban’ on SM tree-cutting
Governor hits open pit mining in Bontoc
Mining confab declares: “Philippines is not for sale”
INTERNATIONAL
The End of the End of Austerity We’re All Greeks Now
Globalism’s Perverse Rewards: World’s Apex Bully Leads World Into Lawlessness
European People Have Rejected Austerity Madness: Will the U.S. Get the Message
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Advocacy group for indigenous peoples pushes agenda for education
Cordillera Day 2012 focuses on mining and militarization
Killed indigenous leader Jimmy Liguyon’s family continue fight for justice
MULTIMEDIA


Video: Workers slam Aquino’s empty speech on Labor Day

Slideshow: Women slam Aquino’s inaction on price hikes


Slideshow: Workers call on Aquino to implement pro-people policies

ON THE FRINGES
The miracle of breast milk
For Dana Marie
CULTURE
Iggy Rodriguez, the artist as a conscious political being
GLOC-9: Nang magkatinig ang pipi
Performing Alan Jazmines: a reflection on his prison poem
FULL COVERAGE
Wages and Labor Issues
Price Increases
GPH-NDFP Peace Talks
2010 Yearender
Morong 43
Aquino's First 100 Days
Hacienda Luisita
Ampatuan Massacre
Home         Subscribe (RSS or Email)        About Us        Donate         Contact Us         Archive         Advertise with Bulatlat
Copyright © 2009 Alipato Media Center Inc.         Read Bulatlat's Syndication Policy         Web design and hosting by Web Host Philippines