Consular Services Appointment System
PCG-Shanghai completes repatriation of 29 Filipino seafarers stranded at sea
Departure Concludes Concerted Effort of DFA, PH Consular Posts
Shanghai - The months-long wait at sea for all 29 fishermen of the vessels Han Rong 362, 366, and 369 concluded on 07 December, as the final departing batch of 10 fishermen flew out of Shanghai aboard two separate flights.
The Han Rong fishing fleet ceased operations in May 2021. Stringent COVID-19 restrictions at China’s ports, however, forced the vessels to remain offshore along coastal southeastern China, leaving the Filipino fishermen unable to disembark.
Related DFA Story: Filipino Fisherfolk Arrive Home After Months at Sea
Following intensive and protracted representations with Chinese central and local authorities, all 29 were eventually transferred and gathered onto one vessel, Han Rong 368, and finally allowed to go ashore and disembark at Zhoushan Port in Zhejiang Province in the mainland, in early November.
Throughout their quarantine, the Philippine Consulate General in Shanghai was in contact with the fishermen, Zhejiang authorities as well as the shipowner and shipping agent to ascertain their condition, attend to their needs, and work out repatriation arrangements.
The fishermen’s return flights to the Philippines took place in batches over the first week of December, owing to the limited air services currently plying the China-Philippines route. Deputy Consul General Marlowe A. Miranda and Assistance-to-Nationals Officer Ella Cecilia P. Acena were present all throughout to send off and assist the fishermen during departure formalities and boarding at the Shanghai Pudong International Airport.
The 29 fishermen’s disembarkation and eventual return was the outcome of a concerted effort guided by the DFA’s Office of the Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs (OUMWA) and involving Philippine consular officials based at the Embassy in Beijing and the Consulates General in the coastal cities of Shanghai, Xiamen and Guangzhou. END
Shanghai TCM experts share occupational wellness tips with PCG personnel
09 December 2021 – In keeping with the Philippine Government’s Gender and Development (GAD) advocacy and its admonition for units to promote workplace health and well-being, a Lecture-Workshop on Traditional Chinese Medicine (or TCM) for Neck and Low Back Pain was conducted by the Consulate General for its personnel and those of its Attached Agencies on 08 December.
The event featured a brief lecture on TCM’s history and principles, followed by demonstrations and consultations provided by licensed TCM practitioners from the TCM Department of the International Medical Center of Shanghai Renai Hospital. The team was composed of Dr. Li Zhen Pan, Dr. Song Fayi, Nurse Ellen Su Lin, and interpreter Ms. Katrina Wu Cong.
The session then addressed the focal issue of occupational or work-related neck and back pain (cervical and lumbar spondylosis), their causes, prevention and relief. The personnel thereafter performed some practical physical exercises taught by the visiting medical team.
Section 17 of Republic Act 9710 or the Magna Carta for Women provides that women shall be provided comprehensive, gender-responsive health services and programs. Section 25 of the same law affirms the right to decent work and to services in support of balancing family and work obligations.
Wellness activities are a component of the Consulate General’s annual GAD Work Plan. END
“Young Journalists” cover PH Consulate General, round up highlights of PH-China Friendship
03 December 2021 – Twenty-one kid reporters aged 7 to 12 and drawn from Grades 2 to 6 went “on assignment” today to the Consulate General and left with a greater appreciation of the Philippines and its links with China, following a four-hour engagement.
Drawn from various schools by the Shanghai Power of Children Foundation, the grade schoolers learned about the Philippines via an interactive audio-visual presentation by Tourism Attaché Ireneo H. Reyes and his team.
The aspiring journalists further satisfied their curiosities about diplomatic life and various aspects of Philippines-China friendship in an interview with Consul General Josel F. Ignacio in individual Q&As. The questions spanned the Philippine’s agricultural trade with China, school system, indigenous peoples and environmental protection.
The Consulate General’s lobby later took on a fiesta atmosphere as the children gamely learned and nimbly performed the spirited steps of Bacolod City’s famous Masskara dance. The kids decorated their own masks using kits provided by the DOT team and guest instructor Ms. Jen Geronimo, a Chinese-speaking Filipino school teacher based in Shanghai.
A halohalo snack gave a literal taste of the Philippines to the young reporters, who each gleefully scooped their mélange of sweet ingredients and preserves of choice into glasses before topping and mixing these with the obligatory crushed ice and milk.
Following an exchange of tokens of appreciation, the Young Journalists symbolically “invested” Consul General Ignacio with the hónglǐngjīn – the traditional Red Scarf donned by “Young Pioneer” Chinese school children – as a gesture of respect and friendship.” END