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News Release - May 20, 2005
References: Connie Bragas-Regalado, Chairperson
Contact Numbers: Telefax - 926-2838 and 0927-2157392
Vince Borneo, Information Officer, 0927-7968198

Gov't not lifting a finger to help undocumented Filipinos in
Saudi Arabia crackdown

The Migrante Sectoral Party questioned the Macapagal-Arroyo government's deafening silence on the ongoing crackdown on undocumented migrant workers in Saudi Arabia, saying that hundreds of Filipinos may be unjustly arrested, detained and criminalized in the Kingdom.

"While the Saudi government is very vocal in its ongoing "crackdown on crime," the Philippine government has taken an indifferent stance on the situation. There are at least 1,000 stranded Filipinos across Saudi Arabia who will fall victim to the said crackdown," MIGRANTE Sectoral Party chairperson Connie Bragas-Regalado said.

Saudi Arabia has tightened security and immigration procedures in the context of the United States government's war of terror. All migrants without work permits and other forms of identification papers will be arrested, detained and deported by air or sea.

"We are quite astonished at the silence of Malacanang, the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Philippine diplomatic posts in Saudi Arabia with the ongoing crackdown on migrants. Hundreds of stranded Filipino workers are languishing in the cities of Riyadh, Jeddah and Al-Khobar. These compatriots ran away from abusive employers and thus do not have their iqamas (work permits) and passports. Many of these stranded workers have also been slapped with trumped-up cases of theft and other misdemeanors and thus stand to get arrested with no chance of fair court proceedings and protection," Bragas-Regalado said.

Reports in Middle East newspapers reveal that Saudi authorities launched a series of raids in Riyadh, Makkah, Taif and Jeddah in April as part of a "nationwide anti-crime campaign."

"So far, these reports said that undocumented migrants from Somalia, Chad, Yemen, Bangladesh and the Philippines have been arrested in April. The crackdown was temporarily stopped as the jails were filled to the brim after the first wave of raids. The silence of Philippine officials in Saudi Arabia on the actual number of Filipinos arrested shows that they are not concerned with the plight of runaway Filipino workers in the Kingdom," Bragas-Regalado said.

So far, no comments have come from the DFA and Philippine Ambassador Bahnarim Guinomla in Riyadh. There are at least 915,000 Filipinos in Saudi Arabia.

"Coupled with its silence on the fingerprinting procedure for all people - including overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) - who enter Saudi Arabia, the Macapagal-Arroyo administration has accepted the Saudi government's all-embracing treatment of undocumented Filipino workers as criminals," Bragas-Regalado concluded. #


EXPULSION BY AIR, SEA: OPERATION DEPORTATION
By Sabria S. Jawhar / The Saudi Gazette
http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/sgazette/Data/2005/5/19/Art_221347.XM
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"For a long time, others have been speaking in our behalf...It is NOW time to speak for ourselves".
MIGRANTE SECTORAL PARTY
Sectoral Party of Overseas Filipinos and Their Families