Kuwait is sending a team to Manila to negotiate a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on labour policy, which will provide added protection to overseas Filipino workers (OFWs).
Labour Secretary Silvestre Bello disclosed yesterday that the information was relayed to him in a formal letter sent by Kuwait Ambassador to the Philippines Musaed Saleh AM Althwaikh.
Bello said members of the Kuwait Ministry of Labour team were expected to arrive in the country in the first week of March, carrying with them a copy of the proposed MoU and the Kuwait government’s comments.
Bello said the signing of the agreement would be done in Kuwait as requested by its ambassador to Manila.
“It will be signed by me as secretary of labour and by my counterpart from the Kuwait Ministry of Labour,” Bello added.
Once signed, the MoU will provide a valid reason for the Labour department to recommend to the president the lifting of the total deployment ban of OFWs to Kuwait.
Among the provisions of the proposed agreement is that passports of Filipino workers in Kuwait will not be confiscated by their employers.
Another provision will allow OFWs to use their cellphones to communicate with their families and the government.
The deployment ban was the government’s response to the alleged abuses committed against Filipino workers, highlighted by the death of Joanna Demafelis, a domestic helper whose body was found inside a freezer a year after she was reported missing.
The ban on the deployment of OFWs to Kuwait will remain, Malacanang said yesterday, even after the arrest of the principal suspects in the killing of Demafelis.
In a news briefing, Palace spokesman Harry Roque Jr reiterated President Rodrigo Duterte’s position that the deployment ban would stay until Demafelis gets justice.
“Well, we certainly appreciate the arrest of two of Joanna’s employers. However, in addition to the arrest, we would like to see them prosecuted and punished for the murder of Joanna,” Roque told reporters.
“As of now, the deployment ban stays because the latest statement on this made by the president was when he visited the wake of Joanna and he said that not only that they must be apprehended, they must be punished,” he added.
Roque made the statement after a group of skilled OFWs affected by the total deployment ban to Kuwait appealed to the government to exempt them from the ban and allow them to leave immediately so as not to lose their jobs.
Representatives Jesulito Manalo of Angkla party-list and Ana Go of Isabela agreed that the arrests of the killers did not merit lifting the ban.
“They should sign a bilateral agreement to protect our workers. This is not about asking a specific protection for Filipinos, but complying with the International Labour Organisation guidelines. Protecting migrant workers is a universal law,” Manalo, chairman of the House Committee on Overseas Workers Affairs, said at a news 
conference.