Joanna Demafelis left for Kuwait four years ago to seek a better life for her family in Iloilo. On Friday morning, she came home to the wails of her siblings as her wooden casket was unloaded from a Gulf Air flight.
It was an emotional reunion for Demafelis’ siblings Jessica and Jojit, who learned only last week that their sister—reported missing for a year—had been found dead inside a freezer in an abandoned apartment unit in Kuwait City.
Demafelis’ body bore signs of abuse—broken ribs, bruises, and contusions—that Kuwaiti forensics said that the maltreatment didn’t happen once, but had continued over a period of time.
Kuwaiti authorities said they had alerted the Interpol to look for Demafelis’ employers, Lebanese Nader Assaf and his Syrian wife, who left the apartment shortly after reporting that their Filipina help had absconded.
Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano, who led the contingent of government officials who met the Demafelis siblings at the airport, assured the family that their counterparts in Kuwait were “exerting all efforts” to locate the suspects.
Demafelis’ case would serve as a “rallying point for all government agencies to be more aggressive in [protecting] our overseas Filipino workers (OFW),” the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) official added.
Cayetano said they would launch in the coming months an international hotline system to help government officials communicate better with the more than 10 million OFWs all over the world, and respond more effectively to reports of abuses.
Demafelis’ remains were expected to arrive in Iloilo at 5:30 this morning via a Philippine Airlines flight.
Last call
Her parents, Crisanto and Eva Demafelis, said they would be up early today to fetch the daughter they had not seen for four years.
Demafelis, 29, came from the farming village of Ferraris in Sara town, Iloilo, where her parents planted corn and palay in a small plot of land. She left for Kuwait in May 2014, to work as a domestic help so she could provide for the family and send their youngest sibling to school.
In 2016, Demafelis extended her contract because “she wanted to save money to have our house repaired,” said her father. “But this will never happen now,” he added.
No communication
Joanna regularly sent money and communicated with them, until her calls became less frequent. Her last call came in February 2017. By then, she had also stopped sending money, forcing her brother Joyce to quit school at the Northern Iloilo Polytechnic in Estancia town, Iloilo, where he was taking criminology.
Eva said a cousin went to the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (Owwa) office in Manila to seek its help in locating her daughter, but was told that there was nothing they could do since Joanna’s recruitment agency had long closed down.
On Feb. 7 this year, an Owwa staff from Iloilo informed them of the body found in the freezer.
Eva said they just wanted to bring Joanna home and give her a decent wake to honor the sacrifices she had endured for the family. They have yet to set a date for Demafelis’ interment.
P500,000 from Owwa
The Owwa on Friday turned over P500,000 to the family in financial and livelihood assistance. A P50,000 educational grant was also given to Demafelis’ youngest sister.
Demafelis’ death triggered a diplomatic row between Kuwait and the Philippines, which announced a “total ban” on new deployment of OFWs to the oil-rich country, and flew home hundreds of others, a move condemned in the Middle East.
In Lucena City, House Minority Leader Danilo Suarez urged the Duterte administration to strictly monitor the total ban on Filipino workers bound for Kuwait to prevent illegal recruiters from victimizing workers.
He said a joint task force could be formed to conduct surveillance operations, gather intelligence reports on illegal recruitment activities and file criminal charges against offenders. —WITH REPORTS FROM DELFIN T. MALLARI JR., JULIE M. AURELIO, JOEL FRANCO AND AFP