logo
Filipinos in Israel face tough choices amid escalating Iran conflict: run or stay?

Filipinos in Israel face tough choices amid escalating Iran conflict: run or stay?

About 150 Filipinos in
Israel have requested help from Manila to return as the conflict escalates with Iran. However, most of the 30,000-strong community, primarily domestic workers and carers, are reluctant to leave their wards behind.
The
Philippine embassy in Israel revealed the number of repatriation seekers on Tuesday.
Migrant Workers Secretary Hans Cacdac told ABS-CBN News the same day: 'By the very nature of their work, they're caregivers, 75 per cent of OFWs [overseas foreign workers] are caregivers … They take care of their elderly patients. Some find it difficult to go home with their dedication to their work.'
Cacdac also said many Filipinos were concerned about losing their livelihood if they returned home, despite government help.
Rocket trails are seen in the sky above the Israeli coastal city of Netanya amid a fresh barrage of Iranian missile attacks on Tuesday. Photo: AFP
'[We have resolved the matter on financial earnings] because we provide them at least four to six months' salary as financial assistance upon their return to stem them over. We also provide reintegration assistance,' he said. 'We are providing the necessary means for people to come home. All it takes is to provide them the opportunity to be repatriated.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TikTok fuelling rise of fascist youth movement in the Philippines, experts warn
TikTok fuelling rise of fascist youth movement in the Philippines, experts warn

South China Morning Post

time42 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

TikTok fuelling rise of fascist youth movement in the Philippines, experts warn

In a TikTok video viewed more than 170,000 times, the eyes of senatorial candidates from the Philippines ' ruling coalition are blacked out with a caption that reads: 'Liberal politics is the most corrupt thing you can get.' Another video, more ominous still, flashes the phrase 'Fight them before they kill you' over symbols of Muslims, Jews, communists, Freemasons and the LGBTQ community – each struck through by a sword. They are just a few examples of an increasingly visible fringe movement brewing in the Philippines' online underworld, where a new generation of far-right extremists is using social media platforms such as TikTok and Discord to recruit, radicalise and rally disaffected youth. The movement, known as the Philippine Falangist Front (PFF), is part of a small but growing network of digital communities promoting fascist ideology in Southeast Asia, according to a recent study by the Global Network on Extremism and Technology. Example of Philippine Falangist Front (PFF) online propaganda. Photo: TikTok Their message is incendiary: the Philippines is a nation in crisis, and only a return to authoritarian Catholic rule can restore order. 'They commonly produce content or engage in discussions lamenting the Philippines' and the world's descent into a so-called godless society,' said Saddiq Basha, the report's author and a research analyst at Singapore's S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.

Israel-Iran conflict enters sixth day as Trump demands Tehran's ‘unconditional surrender'
Israel-Iran conflict enters sixth day as Trump demands Tehran's ‘unconditional surrender'

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

Israel-Iran conflict enters sixth day as Trump demands Tehran's ‘unconditional surrender'

For more on this story: The Middle East finds itself on the precipice as arch foes Iran and Israel escalated their attacks amid a mounting civilian death toll. The US appears to be inching towards direct involvement following US President Donald Trump's message to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei demanding Iran's 'unconditional surrender'.

Almost 800 Chinese flee as Israel steps up strikes
Almost 800 Chinese flee as Israel steps up strikes

RTHK

time2 hours ago

  • RTHK

Almost 800 Chinese flee as Israel steps up strikes

Almost 800 Chinese flee as Israel steps up strikes Chinese tourists at the Golestan Palace in southern Tehran. File photo: AFP Almost 800 Chinese nationals have been transferred from Iran to places of safety and more than 1,000 more are in the process of being transferred, China's Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday. The evacuation came as Tehran said it fired hypersonic missiles at Israel in the latest round of overnight strikes between the archfoes and amid fears that the United States may resort to using a powerful bunker-busting bomb if President Donald Trump chooses to militarily back Israel. "Currently... 791 Chinese nationals have been relocated from Iran to safe areas," ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said. "More than 1,000 other people are in the process of relocating and withdrawing." And some Chinese nationals have also safely evacuated from Israel, he said. "China expresses its thanks to the relevant countries for providing full support and assistance," Guo said. While the embassy emphasised evacuation, some other Chinese netizens still in Iran shared video compilations showing an orderly scenario of well-stocked grocery shops and fruit stalls, with only a couple of clips of large purchases of bottled water. Most Chinese in Iran are engineers who moved there to work for Chinese firms that have invested just under US$5 billion in the country since 2007 – primarily in its oil sector – according to data from the American Enterprise Institute think tank. The first Chinese evacuees from Iran have started sharing on social media their desperate efforts to reach the Islamic Republic's borders and the safety of Turkmenistan, Armenia and Azerbaijan, as the Israel-Iran air war entered a sixth day. Several thousand Chinese nationals are thought to reside in oil-rich Iran, according to state media reports highlighting Beijing's efforts to deepen strategic and commercial ties with the theocratic regime over the past two decades. "My heart was pounding but amid the haze of war, everything became clear: I packed my bags and tried to evacuate to the embassy," wrote a Chinese travel blogger under the alias Shuishui Crusoe, a nod to Daniel Defoe's fictional castaway, Robinson Crusoe. The travel blogger had decided to leave after sitting through Israel's overnight bombings on Friday when the conflict began, even as the embassy told advised her to stay put. Emboldened by news of fellow citizens who made it across to Armenia, 750 km from the Iranian capital Tehran, she chose the same route, arriving by bus in the Armenian capital Yerevan on Monday, a day before China's embassy officially urged citizens to leave Iran. China started evacuating its citizens from Tehran to Turkmenistan by overland bus on Tuesday, a distance of 1,150 km, state-run China News Service reported on Wednesday. More than 700 Chinese nationals have been transferred to places of safety and more than 1,000 more are in the process of being transferred, China's Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday. If the regime in Tehran is severely weakened or replaced, Beijing loses a key diplomatic foothold in a region long dominated by the United States but vital to President Xi Jinping's flagship Belt and Road initiative and its aim to link the world's second-largest economy with Europe and the Gulf. China, the world's leading energy consumer, has also benefited from importing heavily discounted Iranian crude, despite Washington's sanctions aimed at curbing the trade. (Reuters/AFP)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store