Mt. Mattheos I with 14 Filipino Seafarers released from captivity

September 25, 2011 by admin  
Filed under news

mattheos-1-300x199Philippine Ambassador to Spain Carlos Salinas made an initial report to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) that MT Mattheos I, with 14 Filipino seafarers on board, was released from
captivity today and is proceeding to a neutral port.

In the same report, all crew members are well and safe.

MT Mattheos I, a Cyprus-flagged and Norwegian-managed tanker, was seized on September 14, in Lome, Togo in West Africa. The vessel has a total of 23 seafarers of mixed nationalities onboard.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario has alerted  and instructed concerned Philippine Embassies to provide appropriate assistance and to make arrangements for the immediate repatriation of
the Filipino seafarers to Manila.

The Philippine government has undertaken measures to minimize the exposure of Filipino seafarers to piracy attacks, including making arrangements with ship principals and manning agencies for vessels to
travel along a safety corridor and to adopt best management practices as a deterrence to piracy attacks.

It has likewise  taken up the issue of maritime safety and security in the Gulf of Aden and in the Indian Ocean before the United Nations and other international organizations. The Philippines is a member of the intergovernmental Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia.

(Photo credit: eaglespeak.us)

Share

Somali pirates seize Panamanian-flagged vessel with 21 OFWs

April 21, 2010 by admin  
Filed under news

22 April 2010 – The Philippine Embassy in Nairobi confirmed the hijacking of Panamanian-flagged, Liberian-owned bulk carrier Voc Daisy Wednesday morning.

The vessel has 21 Filipino crew members on board.

The Department of Foreign Affairs Office of the Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs said in a press statement that Somali pirates seized Voc Daisy 190 miles southeast of Salalah.

The statement said DFA is coordinating with the vessel’s local manning agency to determine the condition of the Filipino seafarers.balangiga-sea

Share

HIV-AIDS cases increase among young professionals, not only seafarers

January 29, 2010 by admin  
Filed under news

tanker-70x7029 January 2010- Human immuno deficiency virus and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV-AIDS) is no longer just prevalent among seafarers and other overseas Filipino workers but also among call center agents as its incidence rate increased recently.

The Philippine General Hospital (PGH) said in its latest report the number of Filipinos infected with HIV rose dramatically in the past 10 months and now includes young urban professionals such as call center agents.

Doctors at the PGH Infectious Disease Treatment Complex said the number of HIV cases in the hospital rose to 100 in the past 10 months.

Former Labor Undersecretary Susan Ople, daughter of deceased Labor Secretary Blas Ople and a senatorial candidate, noted that a still-to-be-published study conducted by the University of the Philippines (UP) Population Institute, has shown a significant number of call center employees engaged in non-romantic but regular casual sex through a system dubbed as “FUBU” or “Fucked Buddies”.

“I validated the results of this survey with several call center agents and they told me that FUBU is gaining ground especially among nightshift workers,” the labor advocate said, adding that values enhancement services and activities should be made available to call center agents.

Records from the Department of Health showed that the number of HIV cases rose to 709 last year, compared to 528 in 2008.

Dr. Edsel Savana of the PGH Infectious Disease Treatment Complex said 80 HIV cases were recorded for November alone and the spread of AIDS in the country is already epidemic.

Dr. Katerina Leyritana said hospitals have also recorded HIV cases among young urban professionals such as call center agents.

She said majority of the recent HIV cases tend to be younger, mostly from ages 15-29, who are well educated.

Some of those infected said they got the illness after engaging in casual or group sex, which they discovered through social networking sites on the Internet.

Dennis Estopace of Business Mirror wrote in the UP study that F’K Buddies (FUBU) is a phenomenon that involves regular non romantic sexual intercourse among call-center workers , some of who do it at the fire exit area, or in the lounge.

Ople explained that the labor department should consider the results of the UP study from a perspective of improving safety and health standards n the workplace. “Clearly, certain ethical standards must be adopted at the workplace to discourage “Fubu” especially among young workers”, she added.

The survey was carried out in 22 call centers in Metro Manila and Metro Cebu with 675 respondents. Done between September and November last year, it revealed that three of four call center workers and two of three non-call center workers have had “penetrative premarital sex”.

Ople said that the UP study underscores the need for the following initiatives to be carried out through a joint effort of DOLE and the BPO industry:

1) No unisex facilities including private resting places and toilets because these have been transformed by some as “short-time FUBU areas”;

2) Strict monitoring of all staff on office decorum including supervisors some of who use their position and clout to hit on unsuspecting young call center agents;

3) An in-house counseling service that is on duty 24/7 for troubled and emotionally distressed workers;

4) Strong warnings regarding administrative sanctions against those who use office premises for sexual dalliances and encounters;

5) Video surveillance in strategic locations within the office premises and dark corners most favorable to FUBU encounters

Ople said that she has been hearing about Fubu from friends familiar with call center operatons but this is the first study to validate such reports.

“Nothing beats raising professional and ethical standards to promote decency and productivity in the workplace. This is something that the BPO industry leaders should work on jointly with DoLE,” Ople said.

“I hope that the call center industry will take this UP study very seriously and come up with safeguards against sexual promiscuity in the workplace that could lead to emotional stress, sexually transmitted diseases and even broken marriages,” Ople stressed, adding that call center work can be intense and more challenging than the usual office job especially for those in the night shift.

Share