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A new immigration
policy in United Kingdom (UK) prohibits foreign caregivers from filing for permanent
residency status even after five years of continued work in the European
country.
To show
their protest against this new policy, the Filipino community in UK requested a
meeting with a number of British lawmakers. The meeting that was led by the
Kanlungan Alliance of Filipino Organizations was held at the House of Commons
at Westminster in London and lasted for three hours.
In the
said meeting, the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) voiced out their concerns against
the new policy of the UK Border Agency that would no longer renew visas for
anyone who was not being paid the minimum hourly rate of 7.02 pounds or roughly
Php486). The said amount is the rate set for senior care workers or caregivers.
The Kanlungan group said in a statement, “The UK will need
skilled migrant care workers for the foreseeable future. Skilled migrant care
workers are hardworking families. Settlement is one of the main reasons why
they come to Britain.
It’s unfair to change immigration rules for people already settled who’ve
planned for their lives. Salary level should not determine who settles.”
The leaders of Kanlungan and members of other OFW groups
such as Unison and the Migrant Rights Network also met with the All-Party
Parliamentary Group on Migration.
The new policy is deemed by OFWs as unfair and
discriminatory because they have already given visas to other migrant workers with
low salary rate but had worked legally in UK for five years.
The project staff of Kanlungan, Jamima Fagta said thru an
email sent to Inquirer that two Pinoy caregivers
working in London,
Lourdes Dizon Somera and Gundelina Ramirez had a difficult time obtaining their
Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) document. This document would give them
permission to live in the UK
after five years of work.
The caregivers mentioned relayed to the lawmakers how the
new immigration policy negatively affected their families, their job and the community
as a whole.
Somera went to UK
five years ago to work and support her family and younger siblings in the Philippines. She
said she was devastated when her application for ILR was rejected.
Somera also shared that as an orphan, she had come to love
her work and her wards. She said, “It is a mixture of joy and hard work being a
caregiver. I have personal empathy with them so it is fulfilling when I deliver
the care. It is as if I am caring of my own parents.”
Somera and her two year old son who was born in London would need to leave UK if she will not be granted an
ILR.
The Kanlungan project staff, Fagta said that the personal stories
shared by the OFWs touched the audience.
She said, “The OFWs appealed to the MPs to hold a
parliament debate on the matter. The response was positive but we need to work
together to achieve this.”
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