The Manila Economic and Cultural Office yesterday said it "warmly welcomes" Taiwan's plan to set up its first cross-border recruitment center in the Philippines to enable Taiwanese employers to directly hire Philippine migrant workers.
"This initiative reflects the growing partnership between the Philippines and Taiwan and marks an important step toward more ethical, transparent and worker-centered recruitment," office Chairperson and Resident Representative Corazon Avecilla-Padiernos said in a statement.
Photo: Lee Chin-huei, Taipei Times
MECO serves as the Philippines' de facto embassy in Taiwan in the absence of official diplomatic ties.
The Ministry of Labor on Friday last week said that the new center is to open in the first quarter of next year and circumvent the labor brokerage system that has been used to date.
Under the new system, expenses for flight tickets, health checkups and visas for migrant workers would in principle be paid by Taiwanese employers rather than workers, Workforce Development Agency Director-General Lydia Huang (黃齡玉) said.
Padiernos highlighted the direct-hiring mechanism and the shift of key costs to Taiwanese employers, saying the measures can "significantly reduce the financial burden on Filipino workers and help address abusive brokerage practices."
Currently, most migrant workers in Taiwan are recruited through brokers, and many workers pay pre-employment expenses to brokers in their home countries.
Brokers in Taiwan are then permitted to charge them monthly service fees capped at NT$1,800 in the first year after arrival, NT$1,700 in the second year and NT$1,500 from the third year onward.
Padiernos said the office would work closely with the Philippines' Overseas Workers Welfare Administration and Department of Migrant Workers, as well as related agencies in Taiwan, "to help ensure that the new system genuinely protects the rights and welfare of Filipino workers, while also responding to Taiwan's legitimate labor needs."
Although the center has yet to open, Minister of Labor Hung Sun-han (洪申翰) on Friday said that the ministry has a special task force in place to take applications for workers from Taiwanese employers starting tomorrow.
LOUD AND PROUD Taiwan might have taken a drubbing against Australia and Japan, but you might not know it from the enthusiasm and numbers of the fans Taiwan might not be expected to win the World Baseball Classic (WBC) but their fans are making their presence felt in Tokyo, with tens of thousands decked out in the team’s blue, blowing horns and singing songs. Taiwanese fans have packed out the Tokyo Dome for all three of their games so far and even threatened to drown out home team supporters when their team played Japan on Friday. They blew trumpets, chanted for their favorite players and had their own cheerleading squad who dance on a stage during the game. The team struggled to match that exuberance on the field, with
Taiwanese paleontologists have discovered fossil evidence that pythons up to 4m long inhabited Taiwan during the Pleistocene epoch, reporting their findings in the international scientific journal Historical Biology. National Taiwan University (NTU) Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology associate professor Tsai Cheng-hsiu (蔡政修) led the team that discovered the largest snake fossil ever found in Taiwan. The single trunk vertebra was discovered in Tainan at the Chiting Formation, dated to between 400,000 and 800,000 years ago in the Middle Pleistocene, the paper said. The area also produced Taiwan’s first avian fossil, as well as crocodile, mammoth, saber-toothed cat and rhinoceros fossils, it said. Discoveries
Taiwanese paleontologists have discovered fossil evidence that pythons up to 4m long inhabited Taiwan during the Pleistocene epoch, reporting their findings in the international scientific journal Historical Biology. National Taiwan University (NTU) Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology associate professor Tsai Cheng-hsiu (蔡政修) led the team that discovered the largest snake fossil ever found in Taiwan. A single trunk vertebra was discovered in Tainan at the Chiting Formation, dated to between 800,000 to 400,000 years ago in the Middle Pleistocene, the paper said. The area also produced Taiwan’s first avian fossil, as well as crocodile, mammoth, sabre-toothed cat and rhinoceros fossils, it said. Discoveries
Whether Japan would help defend Taiwan in case of a cross-strait conflict would depend on the US and the extent to which Japan would be allowed to act under the US-Japan Security Treaty, former Japanese minister of defense Satoshi Morimoto said. As China has not given up on the idea of invading Taiwan by force, to what extent Japan could support US military action would hinge on Washington’s intention and its negotiation with Tokyo, Morimoto said in an interview with the Liberty Times (sister paper of the Taipei Times) yesterday. There has to be sufficient mutual recognition of how Japan could provide