WASHINGTON D.C. –
Lacking the resources to evacuate some 30,000 Filipino Overseas Workers in Lebanon, the Philippine embassy here has
appealed to the United
States to let Filipinos fleeing the
strife-torn country hitch a ride on their evacuation ships.
Ambassador Evan Garcia, deputy chief of
mission of the embassy, said he made the request for help with the US State
Department which said such assistance could only be made available once the
thousands of Americans have been evacuated and spaces are available for the
Filipinos. The US
has sent a naval fleet as well as cruise ships to retrieve more than 7,000
stranded Americans.
There are some 30,000 Filipino workers in
Lebanon.
In Manila,
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who has just returned from a two-day state
visit to Libya,
has ordered the evacuation of the Filipinos who wanted to leave but the order
could not be implemented because of lack of planes and ships to undertake the
evacuation. She also directed that no one would be left behind “because life is
sacred.”
Later , she ordered the release of P150-M
(about $3-M) to pay for the evacuation of the stranded Filipino workers in Lebanon. Thus
far, only some 300 Filipinos have been able to escape through Syria. On July
23, she personally welcomed back some 290 evacuees who were able to escape from
Lebanon.
Unable to provide transportation to the
trapped workers in Lebanon,
the President appealed to the combatants not to shoot at Filipinos. In a
statement, she said “ We are keenly focused on our zero-casualty goal for
Filipino workers in this conflict and we assure the families of the trapped
overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Lebanon that we will exhaust all
the available means to ensure their safety. The Philippines
makes a special appeal to all combatant forces to spare Filipino nationals who
have no wish other than to be taken out of harm’s way. ”Our crisis managers on
site shall devise clear markers and signs to identify Filipino nationals and in
the name of humanity, I ask the combatants not to harm them."
Garcia said the state department “advised
that, although (its) first priority is the evacuation of American nationals,
the US
government will try to help evacuate Filipinos as well, to the extent that it
would be safe to do so, and within the limits of available resources."
Garcia told DFA the US state department needed information as to the
numbers, locations and identities of the Filipinos designated for the
repatriation to Cyprus, Turkey, Rhodes in Greece
and Damascus and Tartus in Syria.
In Manila,
the Department of Foreign Affairs frantically sent notes verbales to various
embassies pleading with them to let Filipino evacuees board their evacuation
vessels. Among the countries with vessels making the trip to Lebanon are the US,
the United Kingdom, France and Italy.
The Philippines
only finished drafting an evacuation plan
called Oplan Sagip OFW sa Lebanon
on July 19, six days after Israel
started the bombings in Lebanon.
The plan could not be implemented immediately because of lack of resources.
Some 200 Filipino workers who took refuge
in Catholic churches in Beirut have been put on
buses to make the 90-kilometer trip to Syria
but this was still iffy because the roads to Syria have been bombed by Israeli
warplanes. From Damascus, they were supposed to
be flown to Dubai and later Manila
by chartered Kurdistan airlines.
Another 900 Filipinos have announced
their intention to evacuate if a mandatory evacuation is declared.
Philippine embassies in London,
Paris and Rome
have made appealed to these governments to let the Filipinos board their
evacuation vessels out of Lebanon.
But up to now there has been no move to
put all the evacuees in designated relocation centers because the Philippine
embassy in Beirut, which is staffed by only 15 officers and staff, have not
been able to contact those who desire to be repatriated.
DFA said not many OFWs actually wanted to
leave because they believe the conflict is not widespread. Most of those to be
evacuated are those who have lost their jobs or are waiting deportation.
Besides, the DFA said the evacuation is voluntary on the part of the workers.
Labor Undersecretary Danilo Cruz said
that the majority of Filipino workers in Lebanon were employed by Christian
foreigners and were living in Christian districts — areas not being targeted by
the Israelis.
The labor department is providing a 24-hour
hotline telephone service for families of OFWs in Lebanon seeking information.
The DFA said workers in Israel were not in immediate danger compared to
those who are in Lebanon.