'Finally free' - homebound Filipinos cheer end to COVID-19 quarantine ordeal
President Duterte told his government to process the workers so they can finally go home
by ReutersWeary but happy, the returnees queued or dozed in bus stations and at Manila's airport, awaiting transport to home provinces.Image Credit: ReutersMany have lost jobs abroad as the coronavirus batters economies worldwide.Image Credit: ReutersPhilippine President Rodrigo Duterte has told his government to do everything possible to process within a week the thousands of returnees, some of whom tested negative for the coronavirus and completed the mandatory 14-day quarantine long ago.Image Credit: APAmong those hit by the crisis was English teacher Anna Marie Del Carmen, who has been stuck in the capital for two months since her repatriation from Thailand.Image Credit: AP"It feels really good. It's like finally being free from jail, but I learned a lot while being under lockdown, and I met and became friends with a lot of people," she said.Image Credit: ReutersThe authorities blame testing bottlenecks for the quarantine delays, including those experienced by thousands of Filipino crew of more than two dozen cruise ships moored for weeks in Manila Bay.Image Credit: Reuters"So it was both a sad and a happy experience now that we are all going our separate ways."Image Credit: ReutersOverseas Filipino workers, better known locally as OFWs, are breadwinners and a key support base of Duterte.Image Credit: ReutersTheir more than $30 billion of annual remittances is an important driver of the Philippine economy, sustaining millions of family members.Image Credit: APMore than 30,000 overseas Filipinos have returned home and 515 of 27,000 tested for coronavirus were positive as of a week ago, authorities said.Image Credit: ReutersRoughly 10 million Filipinos work or have settled overseas, with large communities in North America, the Middle East and Europe.Image Credit: Reuters