By Jefferson Antiporda/Manila

Three former Filipino workers in Saudi Arabia appeared before the Senate blue ribbon committee to testify against assistant labour attache Antonio Villafuerte who was posted in the Philippine embassy in Riyadh.
The committee had summoned Villafuerte and the women to the hearing on the sex-for-repatriation scandal in which Villafuerte is being implicated.
Michelle, “Annaliza” and “Angel” were fictitious names meant to hide the women’s identity. They also wore veils and dark glasses.
Senator Jinggoy Estrada asked the three women if they were willing to show their faces.
It was then that Michelle took off her veil and looking squarely at the man she had accused of sexually abusing her, declared,  “Remember me, Mr Villafuerte?”
Michelle said she had gone to Riyadh last March 28 to work as a beautician. Instead of taking her to a beauty salon, her employer took her to his home and made her work as a househelp.
Michelle said she had to work for her employer’s family and relatives for more than eight hours a day. Besides being overworked, she was also made to eat stale food.
Unable to bear the hardship anymore, Michelle escaped and sought refuge at the Philippine embassy in Riyadh.
She said she was referred to the Philippine Overseas Labour Office (POLO) where she met Villafuerte, who was in charge of cases involving runaway OFWs.
She said Villafuerte introduced her to an Egyptian man whom she knew only as Ibrahim and who owns a recruitment agency.
Villafuerte told her Ibrahim could provide her with the plane ticket back to the Philippines, as long as Ibrahim accompanies her. Michelle said she rejected the offer.
She said on May 18 she visited Villafuerte’s office to follow up on her repatriation request.
As soon as she arrived, Villafuerte grabbed her and dragged her to a vacant office. There he began to make sexual advances at her, but she managed to escape, Michelle claimed.
At the hearing, Villafuerte denied the incident in his office, saying the office’s log book will show that Michelle was not around during the time she claimed it happened.
He said he left the POLO office and went to the Bahay Kalinga before proceeding to the Philippine embassy to attend the flag ceremony.
Angel told the Senate committee she went to POLO after she was raped by her employer. There she was interrogated by Villafuerte who asked her demeaning questions.
Angel said she never expected that a labour official like Villafuerte, who is supposed to look after distressed OFWs, to be so lewd and insensitive.
Analiza said she too was verbally abused by Villafuerte. She said that before she sought refuge at the Philippine embassy, the driver of the taxi she hired to take her to the embassy attempted to rape her. She pleaded with the driver and he left her alone.
Upon arriving at the embassy Angel was told to go to the POLO office and look for Villafuerte. She stayed at the POLO office until evening and Villafuerte offered to take her to Bahay Kalinga where she could stay while waiting to be flown back to the Philippines.
Inside Villafuerte’s car, Analiza claimed, the labour official tried to sexually abuse her.
Villafuerte denied the claims of the three women, saying he suspects they just wanted to get back at him because he was not able to help them.
However, senators Teofisto Guingona and senator Jinggoy Estrada did not buy Villafuerte’s explanation, and said they were inclined to believe the statements of the three women who had put their dignity and honour on the line.
“It is clear that there is a need to replace the officials there (Riyadh). There is also a need to change the current system because it is clear that there is no working system for looking after the welfare of OFWs,” Guingona said. - Manila Times