Philippine Exam Results

Filed Under (OFWs and OF, Philippine News) by on 28-10-2008

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* Certified Public Accountant 2008 October 20
* Mechanical Engineer 2008 October 16
* Certified Plant Mechanic 2008 October 16
* Professional Mechanical Engineer 2008 October 16
* Real Estate Appraisers 2008 October 10
* Real Estate Brokers 2008 October 10

Rey Calooy - In rags, he found riches

Filed Under (OFWs and OF, Pinoy Bloggers, Web Enterpreneur) by on 19-10-2008

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He once sent 50 application letters to find a job

By Irene R. Sino-Cruz
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 03:50:00 10/19/2008

CEBU CITY, Philippines—Rey Calooy once mailed 50 job application letters because he felt he would not get hired if he were to apply in person. Now the general manager of RNC Marketing Philippines, Calooy has come a long way.

He grew up in a poor family in Libagon, Southern Leyte. Dreaming of a better life, Calooy packed his bags and went to Cebu to get an education, even though his mother could not afford to send him to college.

Calooy worked for his education by carrying goods for buyers in Cebu City’s Carbon Market. He also sold bookmarkers made from used boxes and other recycled products.

Calooy now enjoys the fruits of that education, managing a repacking business, a trading company and another firm that produces instant hot chocolate drink, ginger tea and noodles.

Calooy says he has learned a lot from University of Cebu president Augusto Go, whom he knew when he was still taking up Bachelor of Science in Accountancy at the university.

He came to know and admire Go because the latter made it possible for poor students like Calooy to continue studies despite the uphill struggle to make ends meet.

There were many times, he recalls, when he could not pay his tuition on time. Each time, Calooy would pay Go a visit at his office.

Calooy also recalls how he had to make do with an average of three hours of sleep each night because he had to earn the money to finance his education.

But Calooy made use of his time in school. He was a member of 13 student organizations, including the UC debating club.

When he graduated, he worked as a news reporter with radio station dyLa for over a year.

It was shortly after he lost his job at the station—the company had to lay off workers at the time—that he decided to mail 50 job application letters.

“I did not feel confident. If I apply in person, I would be at a disadvantage. The other applicants came from very good schools, graduated with honors and were dressed up. Even the soles of my shoes had holes,” he says with a laugh.

He found a job with a Manila-based pharmaceutical firm looking for clients in the Visayas. When he succeeded in establishing a sales network in the region, the company hired more salespeople and promoted him to sales manager at the age of 24.

Calooy realized that he did not enjoy the desk job, preferring to go out and meet people. The job also lost its appeal since he could never become the owner of the company, he says.

So, he resigned, even though the company tried to make him change his mind by offering an attractive compensation package. He still decided to leave.

It was a risky move as he already had a family at the time. Calooy recalls how his wife had expressed her fear over their future. But he told her not to be afraid because they were used to being poor.

Using the P20,000 cash bond the company returned to him, Calooy decided to sell dust rags in 1994. He came up with the idea after seeing small boys selling the rags on the streets.

Calooy looked into the demand for dust rags among companies in Cebu and realized that there was an unserved market for the product.

He went to the manufacturer of the dust rags, bought his stock for P15 a kilo and sold the rags for P25 a kilo.

His income from that business was greater than what he used to get when he still worked with the pharmaceutical firm.

He felt he owed the firm something for it was during his stint there that he got to establish business contacts. He contacted them and told them he would supply whatever they needed.

That was the start of his trading business.

At the same time, he tried making laundry soap from used cooking oil. Several attempts resulted in failure, but he did not give up. He spent a sizeable amount before he succeeded in producing laundry soap, which he now sells in Leyte.

He also developed other products, such as ginger tea powder and squash noodles.

Calooy says that his mother is fond of making fresh ginger tea. He also decided to develop squash noodles, remembering the time when his family only ate squash raised by his father when Typhoon “Besing” hit Southern Leyte in 1984, destroying all crops.

He decided to develop agri-based products to help farmers, Calooy says.

Later, he set up a small laundry soap plant and a noodles factory in his hometown, providing employment to 30 and 10 workers, respectively.

His company, RNC Marketing Philippines, provides regular employment to 10 workers.

Another company, My Partners Trading International, is engaged in trading and distribution, while Rhea Naomi Food products manufactures ginger tea, squash noodles and instant chocolate drink.

Calooy has not considered going into exports, believing that the poor, constituting over 90 percent of the total population, remains underserved due to the absence of quality but affordable products.

Calooy recently went to the provincial office of the Department of Trade and Industry to seek assistance so that he could improve the appearance and shelf life of his products.

Calooy attributes his success to discipline, his passion for hard work and his refusal to accept failure.

He urges would-be entrepreneurs to focus on their work and choose friends who have entrepreneurial minds.

But he maintains that education is an important element in attaining success in life.

He urges the youth to consider going into business rather than seek employment when they graduate from school. Succeeding in business does require hard work and perseverance, he says.

“Never give up,” says Calooy, who has been recognized by Philippine Center for Entrepreneurship as one of Cebu’s most inspiring micro-entrepreneurs this year.

OFW in Taiwan gets Death Penalty

Filed Under (OFWs and OF, Philippine News) by on 17-10-2008

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By Veronica Uy
INQUIRER.net
First Posted 15:08:00 10/17/2008

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  • Global Nation Global Nation Most Read RSSMANILA, Philippines – (UPDATE) A Filipina who taught English in Taiwan was sentenced to death by the Kaoshiung District Court for the murder of her job broker in September last year, the Department of Foreign Affairs said Friday.

    In a phone interview, DFA undersecretary for Migrant Workers’ Affairs Esteban Conejos Jr. said the decision was handed down September 30 this year.

    “The first hearing of the appeal would be on the first week of November,” he said.

    Citing court records, Conejos said Nemencia Armia, an undocumented teacher whose visa had expired, had a heated argument over money with her female Taiwanese job broker in the apartment Armia was sharing with an American man.

    “The court said she stabbed the victim to death with a knife, took her ATM card, and made several withdrawals using the ATM,” he said.

    Conejos said Armia originally gave a voluntary confession, which she later retracted.

    But, Conejos said, other pieces of evidence — the knife, the rope, and the garbage bag she used to wrap the body in, the ATM withdrawals, and a closed circuit television camera that caught her dumping the body — led to her conviction.

    Initially, Conejos said, the American was detained together with Armia who eventually was the only one charged by Taiwan authorities.

    He admitted that the DFA did not know of the case because of the country’s one-China policy.

    Armia’s case is not among the 40 possible death-penalty cases being monitored by the DFA.

    However, Conejos pointed out that the Philippine government, through the Manila Economic Cooperation Office, has continued to give Armia legal and other assistance “from the very start.”

    “She has always been represented by a lawyer from the preliminary investigation phase. She had two lawyers during the trial, and she would have two more lawyers during the appeal,” said Conejos.

    The DFA official said his office was now preparing to send Armia’s brother and her children to Taiwan to visit her.

    He said the MECO report did not indicate Armia’s age and province in the Philippines or the number of her children, as well as how long she had been overstaying or how long she had taught before her visa expired.

Online Services for OFWs and OF

Filed Under (Any Topics, OFWs and OF) by animo on 20-08-2008

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Online Services

Apply for Dual Citizenship
Apply for a Special Resident Retiree’s Visa
Balikbayan Plus Program
OWWA Programs and Benefits
Recruitment Agencies
Seafarer Information
Registration of Workers On-Leave
Registry of Safety Professionals
Registry of Certified Workers
Pre-Departure Orientation Seminar Online Reservation
TESDA 2008 Training Calendar
Order Negosyo
Registry of  Safety Training Organizations/Institutions
OFW E-card
Avoiding Illegal Recruiters
Korean Employment Permit System
Registration of Workers-on-Leave (Balik-Manggagawa)
Online registration for overseas-based Filipino emigrant
PhilHealth Overseas Workers Program

By Topic

Registry / Affiliation
Money
Housing
Health & Well-being
Education
Livelihood
Travel Documents and Requirements
Passport Application

Consular passport issuance (DFA Consular Offices/Embassies)

Other Services
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Birth, marriage, death, single-ship certificates issuance (NSO)

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