-Press
Statement - January 1, 2005
Reference: Connie Bragas-Regalado, Chairperson
Contact Numbers: 259-1145 and 0927-2157392
Clearing
the air
New Immigration Law will penalize victims of human trafficking in
Japan
The Migrante
Sectoral Party today called on the Philippine government to clear
the air and appropriately respond to a new immigration control law
that would ride roughshod on victims of human trafficking in Japan.
Law No.
73 enacted by the Japanese Diet on June 2, 2004 for the Partial
Amendment of the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act
in its 159th session is in reaction to a supposed "deterioration
of public security" and to address rampant human trafficking.
When issues
and laws of "public security" - a euphemism for anti-terror
legislation - crop up, victims of human trafficking, undocumented
migrant workers and foreign residents become targets of inhumane
procedures that include warrantless arrests, jail terms, steep fines
and deportation.
Technically,
most of all the 304,678 Filipinos in Japan may be subjected to the
harsh penalties and procedures of the new Japanese law.
Effective
last December 2, 2004, the said Immigration Control aims to immediately
decrease the number of the estimated 250,000 'illegal foreign residents'
that include at least 31,000 Filipino overstayers, 82,000 Filipino
entertainers, and thousands of Filipino wives whose residency status
can be revoked by the Japanese government.
Entertainers,
trainees, Filipina wives and undocumented Filipinos (also called
'bilogs') who comprise the bulk of Filipinos in Japan will be criminalized
by this new law. Human traffickers will go scot free and will continue
to wreak havoc on the lives of foreign residents, and will continue
to amass more profits out of the blood and sweat of migrant workers.
Japanese
government offered victims of human trafficking very little in legal
remedies, psychological and financial support. Generally, victims
will be deported as illegal aliens under the new law after being
meted bigger fines (for Y2 million to Y3 million) and jail terms.
The new
immigration law and the crackdown on undocumented Filipinos in Japan
will not address the issue of human trafficking. It will only raise
revenues for the Japanese authorities by further penalizing Filipino
victims of human trafficking.
The Philippine
government has so far only expressed concern for the possible loss
of the annual average of US$1 billion in remittances from Filipinos
in Japan. It is only seeking a moratorium in the implementation
of the new immigration law and looking for other countries to deploy
Filipina entertainers. Both the Philippine and Japanese governments
are in fact perpetrators in the trafficking of Filipinas.
Seeking
a moratorium on the new immigration law is only staving off an impending
tsunami of further abuse and criminalization of our compatriots
in Japan. Government should exact all measures to protect the democratic
rights and welfare of Filipinos in Japan who are targets of the
new immigration law.
Finally,
the Philippine government must pursue the creation of stable job
alternatives and livelihood opportunities for our people, especially
our women, so that they are not forced into the web of human trafficking
in Japan and elsewhere in the world. #
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