29/09/2021, 19:26 Fragile dreams: Stories of migrant workers from the Philippines: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung in Asia FES in Asia 27.09.2021 Fragile dreams: Stories of migrant workers from the Philippines Future of Work This website gives you regular updates of FES regional projects and activities across our Asia country offices. News | Created by Brenda Pureza Migrant workers from the Philippines leave home full of hopes and dreams; unknown to them are hidden costs of migration that can break their spirit. But help is sometimes at hand, at least for some of them. It offers news articles on current debates and a range of research publications and policy briefs to download. News 27.09.2021 | Future of Work | News TRIGGER WARNING: Sexual violence Fragile dreams: Stories of migrant workers from the Philippines Over 10 million Filipinos work overseas. FES Philippines, together with the Center for Migrant Advocacy (CMA), is collecting international stories of migrant workers in a bid to popularize migrant issues. These are the stories of Jennifer, Jose and Mona: (/news/philippines-migrant-workers) Migrant workers from the Philippines leave home full of hopes and dreams; unknown to them are hidden costs of Jennifer, 31, gripped the pregnancy test tightly. migration that can break their spirit.... more Information (/news/philippinesmigrant-workers) It had been three months since the sexual abuse began. Back home, when she got her confirmation of work abroad, her mind had filled with possibilities. This wasn’t one of them. She exhaled and looked at the test. Two lines were slowly forming, indicating a positive result. Back in the Philippines, Jennifer lived with her parents and her three young children with little to no support from her estranged husband. Like many other Filipino migrant workers, Jennifer went out of the country packed with hopes and dreams; unknown to them are hidden costs of migration that can break their spirit. She was deployed to Saudi Arabia as a domestic worker in April 2019 with a two-year contract, but within months, she found herself begging to be sent home. Jennifer was sexually harassed by her male employer. She refused to work and pleaded with her agency to send her home. This would waste the hefty amount they paid to place her, her agency said, and could not allow it. (#newsControls43602) (#newsControls43602 “My whole world came crashing down. I thought about my children back in the Philippines and what my family will say about me.” said Jennifer about her pregnancy in an interview conducted by CMA. Gender-based violence They sent her to a new employer instead in Lebanon to continue her contract of work as a domestic worker. Jennifer painfully remembered how close she was to the two-year-old child she was taking care of, but this was taken advantage of by her male employer. Jennifer saying no went unheard as her abuser escalated his own attempts. Her co-workers noticed the abuse, yet they remained silent, scared to lose their jobs. Jennifer begged her abuser to let her leave, but it was a time when cities all over the world were implementing community quarantines. COVID-19 cases were rising at an alarming rate. He used this as an excuse to trap her. Because of the pandemic, cases of gender-based violence among migrant workers are increasing (https://www.unwomen.org/en/news/in-focus/in-focus-gender-equality-incovid-19-response/violence-against-women-during-covid-19? gclid=CjwKCAjw9aiIBhA1EiwAJ_GTSpstmXupPggdKomYfxnPj4cw7YZh36lKuguc-C0vtIyfI3Z4NauUxoCwA0QAvD_BwE#facts). Locked down in their abusive homes, they are unable to report or escape these harrowing situations. Jennifer wanted to abort her pregnancy. She was promised abortion pills, but they never came. During one of the many nights she was harassed, the act was finally recorded and reported to support groups enough to facilitate a rescue. She stayed in a shelter for almost three months before she was sent back home. https://asia.fes.de/news/philippines-migrant-workers 1/4

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