Filipinos ignoring ban on Iraq
Manila Standard
UP TO 10,000 Filipinos are ignoring a Philippine government ban on working in Iraq, a recruiting company consultant said yesterday.
The Filipinos enter Iraq via Dubai and Kuwait, many to work at US military bases including camps Anaconda and Victory, said Emmanuel Geslani of Anglo-European Services Inc., a leading employer of Filipinos in Iraq.
President Arroyo banned Filipinos working in Iraq in July 2004 after a Filipino truck driver was kidnapped there.
The driver was freed unharmed after Manila pulled out its token military contribution to the coalition forces and some 4,500 Filipinos working in Iraq at the time were allowed to work out their contracts.
“Many of the former Iraq workers were bitter against the Arroyo administration for imposing the ban,” said Geslani, adding the decision to continue the ban was “ill-conceived” as security in Iraq had improved.
Iraqi embassy charge d’affaires Falih Al-Assadi said Manila should scrap the ban because of the demand for workers in construction and development projects.
Officials have conceded the ban is easy to circumvent and local labor groups have also called for it to be lifted, saying it forces workers to go undocumented.
Several Filipinos have been killed or injured in Iraq, the latest in June when a man was killed and two women were wounded in a mortar attack on the US compound in Baghdad.
Meanwhile, the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration advised Filipino workers bound for the Middle East to remove their tattoos, which are considered offensive to Islam.
It said police had arrested a Filipino worker in Saudi Arabia for having a tattoo on his left arm.
AFP with Vito Barcelo
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