Wednesday Is “Media in Black” Day
The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and its chapters and members nationwide will mark the burial of Palawan broadcaster Fernando Batul on May 31 with a ?nationally coordinated…
The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and its chapters and members nationwide will mark the burial of Palawan broadcaster Fernando Batul on May 31 with a ?nationally coordinated…
Magtanggol Roque Command Front 51 Operations Command NPA-Southern Mindanao Press Statement 30 May 2006 Another cheap AFP publicity stunt The Magtanggol Roque Command Front 51 Operations Command of the New…
DAVAO CITY -- Some 70 owners and operators of cold storage, fast food stores, food processors and importers operating in some parts of Luzon and Manila will come to Davao…
Signs that Sulu is now on the way to recovery and development are yet to come, with random bombings and killings devastating this war-torn Southern Mindanao archipelago. ?Unless the government…
Judith Solis couldn?t wait to abandon her abusive Lebanese employer. When she finally arrived home in Davao City, she had been incapacitated after an alleged suicide attempt. But Judith?s family suspects something more sinister.
By Jeffrey B. Javier
davaotoday.com
DAVAO CITY — Last Feb. 14, 2006, when Jemar Solis was called by his wife?s employer, he got the shock of his life. The employer called to tell him that his wife needed $700 to be sent to Lebanon. Not knowing what the $700 was for, Jemar called his wife?s recruitment agency. The Golden Future Agency, based in Manila, told him that his wife, Judith, had a slight accident on Valentine?s Day and was being treated in a hospital.
Four days later, on Feb. 18, the Overseas Workers? Welfare Agency (OWWA) called to tell Jemar that Judith was in a critical condition. At that moment, she was being operated on; her pelvic and thigh bones had been crushed. According to the police report he received via e-mail, Judith attempted suicide. Jemar knew right then something was not right.
Judith, 32, had been in Lebanon for only eight months; she arrived there in April last year to work as a domestic helper. Between November and December, she regularly called Jemar to complain about her working condition. She would tell him that her life was in great danger. She was determined to go home, she told him.