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DOLE, OWWA to help distressed OFWs in Russia

By Liza Agoot

May 5, 2022, 2:12 pm

<p><em>(File photo)</em></p>

(File photo)

BAGUIO CITY – The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) and the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) has offered to link distressed overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Russia to other agencies and organizations that can address their needs amid the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

In a press conference on Wednesday, DOLE-Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) director Nathaniel Lacambra said while "there is no specific government program solely for them to address the needs of the families but they can visit our office and we will assist them in any way we can.”

He said that aside from government agencies and offices, various non-government organizations also have assistance programs.

“We can refer them or link them for their specific needs,” he said.

Lacambra said that due to the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine, governments have stopped the operation of remittance agencies, thus preventing money from flowing in or out of Russia, making it impossible for OFWs in Russia to send money to their families in the Philippines.

"We can refer them to the Department of Social Welfare and Development for food needs," Lacambra said.

He added that as classes for the next school year open and children or family members of the OFWs need to enroll, the DOLE can link them up with the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) or directly to the schools which might have programs to help their education financing requirements.

"I am sure they will be considerate to the plight of the families in distress due to the war," the director said.

Edgar Melchor Laigo, OWWA officer-in-charge in the region, said 347 Cordillerans are currently working in Russia, many of whom are undocumented and used to work in another country.

“Marami sa kanila ang undocumented, hindi member ng OWWA kasi napunta sila sa Russia galing sa ibang bansa at hindi dumaan sa tamang proseso (many of them are undocumented because they went to Russia without going through the process and came from their previous country of deployment),” Laigo said.

Most of the OFWs in Russia are working as teachers and household workers, he said.

"They are being encouraged to come home but they refuse probably because they are afraid that they will end up without a job here,” he said.

The official, however, stressed that the government is only after OFWs' safety, considering the sanctions being imposed by other countries on Russia as it attempts to invade Ukraine.

He said relatives of 15 of the more than 300 OFWs in Russia have already visited the OWWA-CAR office to inquire about the requirements for their loved ones to become OWWA members.

“Hindi naman sila nanghihingi ng tulong, gusto lang nilang malaman paano maging miyembro ang relatives nila (They are not asking for help but are inquiring about how their relatives can become members of the OWWA),” Laigo said. (PNA)

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