Murder charges have been filed against the Kuwaiti employers of Filipino domestic worker Jeanelyn Villavende, according to the Philippines News Agency.
The news was revealed by labour secretary Silvestre Bello III, during a Senate labour committee hearing, who said the employers had been formally charged and detained.
“That’s good because that’s what we’re asking for – justice. We welcome that,” presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo said in a palace briefing.
However, there is no plan to lift the temporary ban on overseas Filipino workers to the Gulf state, which was enforced following the death of Villavende.
“It stays. The ban is temporary,” said Panelo, who is also chief presidential legal counsel.
Bello said the temporary ban stays until the Kuwaiti Government agrees to “harmonise” the memorandum of agreement on the protection of OFWs in the Arab nation signed by the two countries on May 11, 2018.
The agreement was aimed at putting an end to inhumane treatment committed against Filipino workers by their Kuwaiti employers.
Nakatanggap si Labor Sec. Silvestre Bello III ng impormasyong nakasuhan na ang mga amo ng pinaslang na OFW sa Kuwait na si Jeanelyn Villavende. pic.twitter.com/aDGTYgFBAm
— News5 AKSYON (@News5AKSYON) January 28, 2020
On December 28, 2019, Villavende was brought dead to a hospital in Kuwait after reportedly being beaten by her lady employer. Her family in the Philippines were informed of her death on December 30.
Results of the National Bureau of Investigation’s examination of Villavende’s remains showed signs of sexual abuse on the victim. There were also “old healed wounds” which indicate that Villavende had been battered weeks prior to her killing.