ZAMBOANGA, Aug 30 — Rina, 17 years old and heavily pregnant, is waiting for her husband to be deported.
The two were caught in a round-up of illegal immigrants in the city of
After spending several weeks in a detention centre, she was put on a ferry to the southern Philippine
Both eventually got the coveted identity cards allowing them to stay in
“It was too hard for my parents to get my papers,” she said.
Her 18-year-old husband comes from a village on Jolo, an island in the Sulu chain, but she does not know its name.
So she spends her day listlessly waiting for him to arrive at a government centre for displaced persons in Zamboanga.
“I want to stay in the
Most of the Filipinos deported from
Philippine government figures show that some 8,000 Filipinos were deported from
The numbers are set to rise sharply since
Among them is Amina Hasan, 20.
She and her two-month-old daughter arrived in Zamboanga from
“I hope I can secure the documents and finances to return legally, but if not I'll be forced to go back the other way,” she said.
That will probably be her only option. Under the clampdown,
Most slip back from Sulu's southernmost islands. The night trip, usually in outrigger boats called bancas, costs between 3,000 and 4,000 pesos (RM285), say those that have done it.
Deportees are on at most twice-weekly ferry sailings from
The clients — as the staff call them — usually stay only for a few days before being given a small allowance to get home. Around 70 per cent of the deportees are male, typically aged between 18 and 35. Everybody there complained earlier this month of poor food or too little of it during their detention in
The centre's director Nadzma Hussein said around 20 per cent of deportees arrive with health problems, mainly respiratory and skin conditions. A few cases of tuberculosis also turn up.
-TMI
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