
Filipino 'caring culture' hit hard by Canada truck-ramming that killed 11, World News
VANCOUVER - The election eve truck-ramming that killed 11 people and injured dozens more in Vancouver sent waves of grief across Canada's Filipino community, integral to Canada in part through many members' roles as caregivers.
A man drove through a crowded pedestrian zone during a Filipino cultural festival on Saturday (April 26). Officials have arrested a suspect they said had a significant history of mental health issues, and said there was no evidence of terrorism in the attack that struck just before Monday's election to choose a prime minister.
The victims ranged in age from 5 to 65, officials said. Five-year-old Katie Le was killed with both her parents, Richard Le, 47, and Linh Hoang, 30, according to a Go Fund Me page that raised $250,000 (S$327,400) for the family. Also among the dead was Kira Salim, a teacher and counselor at a middle school and secondary school, education officials announced.
Nearly one million of Canada's 40 million people identify as being of Filipino ethnic origin, and more than 172,000 Filipino Canadians are in British Columbia, according to the 2021 census.
Their influence extends across Canada as caregivers. Many Filipinas have carved out their place in Canada by raising other people's children. Still others tend to the elderly, or have found careers as nurses or medical technicians.
"This is what we do best," said Christina, 58, a Filipina who attended a candlelight vigil for the victims and asked not to be identified by last name. "We're just such a caring culture. We always say we're willing to give."
David Eby, the premier of British Columbia, acknowledged their role in comments on Canadian television on Sunday when he pledged to support them "just like they support us."
"It's their turn to get care from us," Eby said.
The provincial government has pledged that victims and their families will have access to support.
The truck-ramming came during a celebration honoring Datu Lapu-Lapu, the Filipino chieftain who defeated Spanish forces led by Ferdinand Magellan in the Battle of Mactan in 1521 and became a national hero. Filipino Canadians see the government of British Columbia's 2023 official recognition of April 27 as Lapu-Lapu Day as acknowledgement of the cultural contributions of their community, one of the largest immigrant groups in the province.
"We've been here a really long time," said Jonathan Tee, 30, a second-generation Filipino born in Canada. "We don't need to earn a place here. We are here."
Some 75,000 people from the Philippines became permanent residents of Canada through the Live-in Caregiver Program between 1992 and 2014. The programme offering a path to permanent residency has been modified since 2014. Vulnerable to exploitation
Women fleeing poverty in the Philippines and living in the homes of their Canadian bosses needed to maintain employment in order to gain permanent residency, leaving them vulnerable to extreme working conditions and abuse.
"It was deeply exploitative because of the closed permit tied to a particular employer," said Geraldine Pratt, a professor at the University of British Columbia whose studies on the subject underpinned the stage play "Nanay," depicting the lives of live-in caregivers.
"Most of us have some connection to the Filipino community. And it's not just childcare. It's care for seniors, it's hospitals, when you go for a mammogram or to get your blood tested," Pratt said.
[[nid:717343]]
Many immigrants from the Philippines are highly educated and overqualified for the jobs available to them, according to a 2023 Canadian census report.
More than 40 per cent of Filipinos held a bachelor's degree or higher but were underrepresented in jobs requiring such a degree, the report said.
The overqualification rate of 41.8 per cent was nearly double the rate of the Chinese population and was nearly three times the rate of 15.5 per cent among the total population, the report said.
"One factor in overqualification and job mismatch was that over one-third (34.0 per cent) of Filipino immigrant women immigrated as principal applicants through the caregiver programme, which recruits them to work in personal care occupations," the report said.
About 36 per cent of Filipinas who earned nursing degrees back home instead worked as nurse aides, orderlies or patient service associates in Canada, while 13 per cent worked in sales or service jobs, the census report said.
Maki Cairns, 26, who advocates for the rights of women in the Philippine diaspora as an activist with the group Gabriela BC, said many have chosen to remain silent in the face of abuse so that they can bring their own children to Canada.
"Why do they have to be separated from their families and raise children that are not their own?" Cairns said. "They hardly ever get to see their children in the Philippines."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

AsiaOne
9 hours ago
- AsiaOne
Filipino families flee Northern Irish home after night of anti-immigrant violence, World News
BALLYMENA, Northern Ireland — Michael Sancio, a resident of the Northern Irish town of Ballymena, said he was woken at midnight on Tuesday (June 10) by masked men banging loudly on windows. Sancio, his wife and daughter, and a couple who share their house — all originally from the Philippines — grabbed their passports and a few belongings and fled their home, sleeping at a friend's house on Tuesday night. They said they plan to stay further outside the town on Wednesday because they feel unsafe at home. Hundreds of masked rioters attacked police and set homes and cars on fire in the town of 30,000 people for a second successive night on Tuesday. Police are investigating the damaging of property as racially-motivated "hate crimes". "Last night I woke up at 12 midnight because I heard some people outside, and I saw in the window, I saw the other guys wearing a black jacket and black pants, and also they're wearing a mask," Sancio, 27, told Reuters on Wednesday. "They started banging the window of our neighbours so I panicked because I have a daughter inside that house." The rioters smashed the windows of the couple's car that was parked outside the house and set it and a bin on fire, said Sancio, who works at a local bus manufacturer. The violence erupted after two 14-year-old boys were arrested and appeared in court, accused of a serious sexual assault on a teenage girl in Ballymena, a town with a relatively large migrant population located 28 miles (45km) from Belfast. The charges were read via a Romanian interpreter to the boys, the BBC reported, adding that the lawyer told the court that they denied the charges. Anti-migrant violence is rare in Northern Ireland, which for decades has been more familiar with sectarian violence between resident Catholics and Protestants, including in Ballymena. While a 1998 peace deal largely ended the three decades of bloodshed between Protestants who want to remain under British rule and Catholics favouring a united Ireland, there are still sporadic clashes. 'Extreme fear' Sancio said the masked men told them that they were not targeting Filipino people. Around Ballymena, Filipino residents put stickers of British and Filipino flags on their doors, with messages saying "Filipino lives here" to show they were not Romanian. Union Jack flags regularly fly in the largely pro-British town. Democratic Unionist Party councillor Lawrie Philpott told Reuters that some people who usually don't fly flags had hung Union Jacks outside their homes this week to show they are local. Around 6 per cent of people in Northern Ireland were born abroad, according to government statistics. The foreign-born population in Ballymena is higher, in line with the UK average of 16 per cent, and includes a relatively large Filipino community. Northern Ireland has been broadly welcoming to migrants but that has been tested recently. Violent disorder erupted in Belfast last August as part of anti-immigration protests that swept across several UK cities following the murder of three young girls in northwest England. In the Republic of Ireland, rioting broke out in Dublin in late 2023 during anti-immigrant protests that were triggered by a stabbing attack that left a child seriously injured. Sian Mulholland, a local lawmaker from the Alliance Party, said she was fielding calls from migrant families who in some cases had barricaded themselves into their homes until 2.30am (9.30am in Singapore) on Wednesday morning. "I had been engaging with this community beforehand because the houses they are living in are not fit for purpose. They're (living in) squalor," she told Reuters. Sancio's wife, Mariel Lei Odi, was working a night shift on Tuesday. When she returned home, she was worried about the safety of their two-year-old daughter, she said. "When I (came home to) my husband and chatted about what happened last night: (I said) 'my daughter, my daughter, my daughter. What happened?'," she said. Michael Asuro, who lives in the house with his wife, Jessa Sagarit, said he came to Northern Ireland just under two years ago to seek a better life. Sagarit said she felt traumatised by the events. Police have said they are braced for more violence on Wednesday. As residents boarded up broken windows and doors in Ballymena, the Filipino families wondered about their future and whether they will stay. "We feel extreme fear," Asuro said. [[nid:718449]]

Straits Times
10 hours ago
- Straits Times
G-7 tries to avoid Trump conflict by scrapping joint communique
In place of a single document, G-7 leaders are likely to release standalone joint leaders' statements on various topics. PHOTO: REUTERS WASHINGTON – Group of Seven (G-7) nations won't try to reach consensus on a joint communique at next week's leaders summit in Canada, people familiar with the matter said, an acknowledgment of the wide gulf that separates the US from the other members on Ukraine, climate change and other issues. In place of a single document, G-7 leaders are likely to release standalone joint leaders' statements on various topics, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private deliberations. That approach is the preference of the Canadian hosts, they said. Prime Minister Mark Carney is looking to ease tensions with the US president and push forward with talks about trade and security. Agreeing on a final communique is usually a ritual for leaders gathered at meetings like the G-7 summit. While the document has no legal authority, it amounts to a statement of principles and is intended to display unity among the participants on topics of global importance. The communique from 2024's summit, for example, was 36-pages long and included pledges to support Ukraine in the conflict with Russia, tackle climate change and foster gender equality. But Mr Trump has upended US policy on all those issues and many more, declining to voice support for Ukraine over Russia, scrapping climate-change initiatives and dismissing gender initiatives as part of a 'woke' agenda by Democrats. Mr Carney wants to avoid a repeat of 2018, the last time Canada hosted the Group of Seven leaders, when Mr Trump pulled out of the joint communique hours after signing it because he was annoyed by comments made to reporters by then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. In addition to trade, the leaders of the group of wealthy economies – the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Japan and Canada – are set to discuss artificial intelligence, energy security, wildfires and global conflicts, including in Ukraine and the Middle East. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will join the summit, along with the leaders of India, Brazil, Mexico and others. Following the 2018 meeting, final documents tended to be shorter so that they were less time-consuming to negotiate but also included less text that members could disagree with, said Ms Caitlin Welsh, who served in Mr Trump's first administration. 'Moving forward to this year's G-7 summit, today the Trump administration almost certainly believes that no deal is better than a bad deal, and it continues to prefer a back-to-basics approach to the G-7,' Ms Welsh said at a briefing held by the Centre for Strategic and International Studies. 'The Trump administration last time around believed that the G-7 had strayed from its original purpose, which was to promote global economic stability and growth,' she said, adding that Mr Carney's agenda 'appears to stick to traditional G-7 principles.' BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Business Times
12 hours ago
- Business Times
Canadian G7 summit gears up around geopolitics
THE G7 was founded half a century ago to facilitate shared macroeconomic initiatives in response to 1970s challenges, including the then-energy shock, and the ensuing international recession. However, the body has evolved into much more of a powerful geopolitical actor in the decades since. This core fact will be crystal clear at the Canadian-hosted leadership summit from Sunday (Jun 15) to Tuesday in Kananaskis, Alberta. Top of Prime Minister Mark Carney's major priorities for the event is 'protecting our communities and the world' which he defines as 'strengthening peace and security, countering foreign interference and transnational crime'. To this end, key topics at the G7 include: preserving Ukraine's long-term prosperity and security; regional peace and stability in the Middle East; cooperation to increase security and resilience across the Asia-Pacific region; building stability and resilience in Haiti and Venezuela; supporting enduring peace in Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo; and strengthening sanctions and countering hybrid warfare and sabotage. Big agenda It is a big agenda, and one that requires deep global partnerships. This is why Carney, US President Donald Trump, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and European Council President Antonio Costa will be joined by a host of other world leaders. These include Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum may also attend. The strong geopolitical flavour of the Canadian G7 underlines the group's often under-appreciated importance as an international security lynchpin. The G7's involvement in this multitude of geopolitical dialogues is controversial given its original macroeconomic mandate. For instance, Beijing strongly objects to any G7 discussion of security issues in Asia. China and some other non-Western countries assert that the G7 lacks the legitimacy of the United Nations to engage in these international security issues, and/or is a historical artefact given the rise of new emerging market powers who are not members. However, it is not the case that the international security role of the G7 is new. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up An early example of the lynchpin function the body has played was when it helped coordinate Western strategy towards the then-Soviet Union. Moreover, following the September 2001 terrorist attacks, the then-G8 (including Russia) assumed a key role in the US-led 'campaign against terrorism'. To be sure, economic issues will also be on the agenda in Canada, but these will often be shaped by security issues and geoeconomic in nature. The second of Carney's major agenda priorities, for instance, is 'building energy security and accelerating the digital transition' including 'fortifying critical mineral supply chains'. This agenda has come to higher prominence since Moscow's military invasion of Ukraine in 2022 which exposed the huge reliance of the EU, in particular, on Russian energy. Since then, there has been an intensified emphasis by advanced industrialised economies, not only Europe, to diversify dependence for raw materials driving a recent series of major trade deals, including the EU-Mercosur agreement. In recent days, much media attention has focused on Carney's invitation of Modi, signalling a potentially significant shift in Canada-India relations. There had been a souring of ties since Trudeau accused New Delhi of carrying out the killing of a Sikh separatist leader, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in British Columbia in 2023. Nijjar had called for creation of a separate state for Sikhs in India. Four Indian nationals have since been arrested in connection to his murder. However, an even bigger diplomatic challenge for Carney will be Trump and seeking to preserve alliance unity, especially given the disruptive impact of the US president's agenda on issues such as tariffs. Carney will be very well aware that, in 2018, when Canada last hosted the G7 summit, tensions between his predecessor as prime minister, Justin Trudeau, and Trump boiled over. So much so that the US president refused to sign the end-of-summit communique, and called for Russia's re-entry into the club. Trump criticised other G7 leaders, including Trudeau, as having 'acted so meek and mild' but 'very dishonest and weak' in an extraordinary outburst. Moreover, upon leaving the Canadian event, Trump went on to heap praise on North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un who he met soon afterwards at the so-called Singapore summit. This show of positive feedback came despite little, if any, new concessions from Pyongyang at the time over its nuclear programme in talks with Trump in a process that collapsed a year later in Vietnam. The potential for problems may be just as high in coming days, if not higher, with Trump taunting Canada, for months now, with jibes of wanting it to become the 51st US state. So Carney, who only took office on Mar 9 after a career as a central banker, faces a potentially very challenging event to host successfully. Far from serving as an annual affirmation that the G7 club is largely aligned, as in the past, this year's diplomacy may see very significant splits. This could potentially be over the major flashpoints that include not only tariffs, but also Ukraine. As in 2018 at the last Canadian G7, it is even possible that Trump may again call for a return of Russian to the club, when it was the G8. Yet, most other G7 members are strongly opposed to this and there is little sign that Moscow, which joined the then-G8 summits from 1997 to 2014, will be invited back to the club while President Vladimir Putin remains in office. Seeking consensus This context makes it difficult for the Canadians to frame a 'Trump-proof' G7 agenda. However, despite disagreements over Ukraine, Ottawa may seek to highlight consensus at this week's foreign ministers meeting over foreign issues including stability in the Asia-Pacific region, the crises in Haiti and Venezuela, and peace and security opportunities and challenges in Africa. Even this agenda carries risks, however, given the Trump team's berating of the failure of numerous key states to spend more on defence, a theme that is likely to figure again later this month at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization leadership summit in the Netherlands. This list of states includes Italy, despite the close relationship between Meloni and Trump. Taken together, this year's G7 could therefore see big diplomatic fireworks again. While some of the club's disagreements pre-date Trump, his presidency has widened these schisms in a way that poses the biggest threat to Western unity in living memory. The writer is an associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics