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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

DOLE sets up One-Stop Shop Processing Center, Crisis Management Committee for Sabah repatriates

By Mary Jane R. Amarado

ZAMBOANGA CITY - Labor and Employment Secretary Rosalinda Dimapilis-Baldoz the other day instructed the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) Regional Coordination Committee in the Zamboanga Peninsula Region to work together and beef up the One-Stop Shop Processing Center (OSSPC) to assist Filipino deportees from Sabah.

Sec. Baldoz, however, emphasized that the 289 deportees assisted by the DOLE were “regular deportees,” and their deportation were not in any way connected to the tension in Sabah between the Malaysian authorities and the heirs of the Sultan of Sulu.

"I visited Zamboanga City to get the best handle of the situation that might involve our OFWs in Sabah. I was informed by our field officials that the 289 are "regular deportees" who came from all over Sabah and Peninsular Malaysia through regular commercial vessels from Sandakan," she said.

"In fact, our data showed that 195 deportees from Sandakan, Sabah arrived last Jan. 6, while another 109 deportees arrived on Jan. 12, bringing the total deportees to 897 this year alone. The transportation expenses of these deportees were shouldered by the Malaysian government," she added.

Because of this seeming uptick in the number of deportees, Baldoz said, she had ordered the DOLE Regional Coordination Committee to strengthen the OSSPC Sabah at the height of the Malaysian crackdown on illegal immigrants in 2005.

"We have the template on how to deal with the arrival of deportees and we are activating and strengthening it just as there will be an influx of deportees,” she said during a meeting of the RCC which was attended by the heads of the DOLE Regional Office, OWWA, POEA, TESDA, and the NCMB.

The heads of the PRC and the NLRC failed to attend the meeting.

The OSSPC, located at the Area Vocational and Rehabilitation Center in Mampang, Zamboanga City, was created through Administrative Order No. 115 on March 5, 2005.

Baldoz, then administrator of the POEA, supervised its operations and she even visited Bongao in Tawi-Tawi, Sandakan and Kota Kinabalu in Sabah to coordinate with Malaysian employers and authorities for the safe return to the Philippines of undocumented OFWs and their safe and legal return to Malaysia.

The OSSPC provides various services to the deportees, including transient stay, passport services, NSO birth certificate issuance, NBI clearance issuance, TESDA training, POEA processing of OEC, OWWA membership, reintegration services such livelihood, capability building, and entrepreneurship skills, and referral for local employment.

The OSSPC Baldoz was also informed by the RCC officials that they have already established a Crisis Management Committee to respond just in case there will be an influx of deportees.

"The DOLE is ready to help facilitate the smooth arrival of the deportees and we are ready with our reintegration programs and other services. However, we must work in convergence with other national agencies and local government authorities," Baldoz said.

DOLE’s partner, the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) has extended support by preparing deportees’ profile and providing food, accommodation, transportation, and other humanitarian support services.

Malayan immigration records showed that there were 57,500 Filipino workers with work permit in Sabah as of 2010. These Filipinos went to Sabah illegally and did not pass through POEA processing. There were another 95,951 illegal workers registered under the Malaysian's Operation Bersepadu in 2010. (PIA9)