Israel to deport around 100 Pinay workers, children — report
Around a hundred Filipina workers and their children in Israel are set to be deported by the Population and Immigration Authority in the next two months, according to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
The report said that "dozens" of Filipino overseas workers, together with their Israeli-born children, will be sent back to the Philippines this coming July to August for lack of legal documents.
The visas of these migrant workers have supposedly expired for non-renewal after childbirth.
Meanwhile, Filipinos and their children reportedly demonstrated in front of Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence in Jerusalem to protest their imminent deportation.
They requested the Israeli authorities to at least let their children finish high school before deporting them, according to the report.
Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said the deportation does not slide smoothly with the many good agreements in the pipeline between Israel and the Philippines.
"Oh crap. It doesn't help that many good agreements signed by PRRD in Israel—especially beneficial to PH—still pending in Manila," Locsin said on his Twitter account.
"We'll soon lose hundreds of jobs in hotel industry for same reason," he added.
Baja also said that Filipino workers must observe the immigration laws of foreign countries where they are employed.
The DFA added that it will provide "reintegration assistance" to those who will be repatriated. — RSJ, GMA News
Comments