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	<title>remittances &#8211; The Milli Chronicle</title>
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	<lastBuildDate>Mon, 18 May 2026 13:42:29 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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	<title>remittances &#8211; The Milli Chronicle</title>
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		<title>Middle East Conflict Leaves Filipino Workers Facing Layoffs, Debt and Return Home</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2026/05/67310.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[NewsDesk MC]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 May 2026 13:42:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://millichronicle.com/?p=67310</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Dubai-The escalating conflict in the Middle East is disrupting the livelihoods of thousands of Overseas Filipino Workers across Gulf economies,]]></description>
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<p><strong>Dubai-</strong>The escalating conflict in the Middle East is disrupting the livelihoods of thousands of Overseas Filipino Workers across Gulf economies, with layoffs, unpaid work and business slowdowns forcing many to return to the Philippines or reconsider long-term plans abroad.</p>



<p><br>More than 2.4 million Filipino workers are employed across the Middle East, primarily in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, in sectors ranging from healthcare and hospitality to retail and domestic work. Their remittances account for roughly 10 percent of the Philippine economy, making the regional downturn a major concern for households dependent on overseas income.</p>



<p><br>The conflict, now in its third month, has triggered uncertainty across Gulf economies reliant on expatriate labor. Filipinos interviewed by Arab News described abrupt job losses, shrinking work opportunities and financial stress amid declining business activity and security fears.</p>



<p><br>A Filipino domestic worker in Dubai, identified only as Cinderella, said she lost stable employment after the Syrian family she worked for left the UAE because of the conflict.</p>



<p><br>“The money I raise from my part-time work is not enough,” she said, adding that she often reduced herself to one meal a day to save money while struggling to cover rent and basic expenses.</p>



<p><br>Another Filipino worker, Kim, said she was among roughly 200 employees laid off from a luxury hotel in Doha as the hospitality sector contracted amid weaker business activity.</p>



<p><br>“The hotel was cutting employees because of the situation,” she said, adding that the company anticipated reduced operations due to the conflict.<br>Although the hotel later offered to reverse her termination, Kim said she chose to return permanently to the Philippines after spending more than a decade working in the Gulf.</p>



<p><br>Others said the instability accelerated plans already underway to relocate home. Tere, a Filipino resident in Bahrain, said suspended projects and weakening business conditions influenced her family’s decision to settle permanently in Manila.</p>



<p><br>Despite the downturn, remittances from the Middle East still rose slightly in the first quarter of 2026 to $1.55 billion from $1.49 billion a year earlier, according to figures cited in the report.</p>



<p><br>The Philippine government said more than 11,000 Filipinos have sought assistance through repatriation programs since the conflict intensified, including around 4,500 from the UAE, more than 2,200 from Kuwait, and nearly 1,000 each from Saudi Arabia and Qatar.<br>Hans Leo Cacdac, secretary of the Department of Migrant Workers, said many returning workers still hoped to go back once regional conditions stabilized, with roughly 70 percent expressing interest in returning to Gulf jobs after the conflict.<br>The Philippine government has introduced emergency support measures including financial assistance, psychosocial support, livelihood programs and healthcare services for displaced workers. Filipinos who lost jobs but remain in the region are eligible for one-time assistance payments of $200 under crisis-response programs operating in 10 Middle Eastern countries.<br>For some workers, however, returning home remains financially difficult despite the instability. Cinderella said she planned to remain in Dubai for now after recently securing cleaning work, though she hoped eventually to move to Cairo, where she previously worked for a decade.</p>
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		<title>Cuba’s elderly struggle as economic crisis deepens and migration drains support networks</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2026/04/66010.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[NewsDesk MC]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 10:23:38 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Havana— Cuba’s elderly population is facing mounting hardship as the island’s deepening economic crisis, shrinking state subsidies and large-scale emigration]]></description>
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<p><strong>Havana</strong>— Cuba’s elderly population is facing mounting hardship as the island’s deepening economic crisis, shrinking state subsidies and large-scale emigration leave many older residents increasingly dependent on churches, informal work and community aid to survive.</p>



<p>At the Church of the Holy Spirit in Old Havana, nearly 50 elderly residents gather three times a week for a free lunch of rice, beans, ground meat and coffee, a modest but essential supplement for pensioners whose monthly incomes often amount to less than $10 at informal exchange rates.</p>



<p>Among them is 84-year-old retired chemical engineer Carmen Casado, who receives a monthly pension of 2,000 Cuban pesos, worth roughly $4 on the informal market. Living alone, without children or remittances from relatives abroad, she relies on church meals in addition to the limited bread, rice and beans available through Cuba’s state-run ration stores.“This is a lifeline for us retirees with small pensions,” Casado said. </p>



<p>“What we get from the bodegas alone is not enough.”Older Cubans, many of them former state employees such as teachers, doctors, nurses and technicians, have been among the hardest hit by the worsening downturn, which intensified this year following an oil embargo imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump.</p>



<p>The crisis has brought further cuts to subsidized goods that for decades formed the backbone of Cuba’s social safety net, while rising shortages and inflation have eroded the value of fixed pensions.At the same time, the migration of younger Cubans has left many elderly residents isolated, without family members to provide financial support or day-to-day care.</p>



<p>Cuba was already one of Latin America’s oldest societies before the latest wave of emigration. By the end of 2024, nearly 26% of the population was aged 60 or older, according to Cuba’s National Bureau of Statistics, compared with a regional average of 14.2% reported by the U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).Over the last five years, Cuba’s population has declined by nearly 1.5 million, largely because of outward migration. </p>



<p>The number of residents on the island has fallen from 11.1 million to 9.7 million.The demographic shift is increasingly visible in Havana, where elderly residents stand in long lines for rationed food, sell small items such as cigarettes on the streets or search for assistance from churches and state institutions.</p>



<p>The pressure has prompted the government to authorize private entrepreneurs to operate elder-care services and residential facilities, a notable shift in a country where social services have traditionally remained under state control.Casado says she still considers herself fortunate. At 84, she remains physically independent, climbs the stairs to her aging apartment without a cane and needs only blood pressure medication, which she says is still available through state pharmacies.</p>



<p>Born in 1942, she has lived through the Cuban Revolution, the 1962 missile crisis, the Soviet-backed economic boom of the 1970s and 1980s, and the severe shortages of the post-Soviet “Special Period.”Despite today’s hardships, she continues to place responsibility for Cuba’s economic difficulties largely on the United States.</p>



<p>“We’re doing everything we can here to move the country forward,” she said. “But the thing is, we have a very powerful enemy, and he’s right there, right on our doorstep.”</p>
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		<title>Cuba’s Elderly Bear Brunt as Economic Crisis Deepens Under Fuel Shortages</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2026/04/65959.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[NewsDesk MC]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2026 16:18:11 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Havana— Cuba’s elderly are increasingly struggling to survive as the island’s deepening economic crisis erodes pensions, shrinks state subsidies and]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p><strong>Havana</strong>— Cuba’s elderly are increasingly struggling to survive as the island’s deepening economic crisis erodes pensions, shrinks state subsidies and accelerates the emigration of younger relatives, leaving many older citizens dependent on church meals and informal work to get by.</p>



<p>The hardship has intensified since the beginning of the year following an oil embargo imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump, worsening fuel shortages and compounding a prolonged economic downturn that has strained food supplies, transportation and public services across the communist-run island.</p>



<p>At the Church of the Holy Spirit in Old Havana, nearly 50 elderly residents gather three times a week for a free lunch of ground meat, rice, red beans, crackers and Cuban coffee — a modest meal that many describe as essential.“This is a lifeline for us retirees with small pensions,” said 84-year-old Carmen Casado, a retired chemical engineer whose monthly pension of 2,000 Cuban pesos is worth about $4 at the informal exchange rate widely used in daily transactions.Casado lives alone, has no children and receives no remittances from relatives abroad. </p>



<p>She said the food supplements the limited rations of bread, rice and beans available through Cuba’s state-run subsidized stores, known as bodegas.“What we get from the bodegas alone is not enough,” she said.Older Cubans, many of them former state employees including teachers, doctors, nurses and technicians, are among the groups hardest hit by the downturn. </p>



<p>Monthly pensions for many retirees remain below $10, while access to subsidized goods has narrowed and inflation has sharply reduced purchasing power.At the same time, the country’s aging population and the mass departure of younger Cubans have deepened social isolation for many elderly residents.</p>



<p>According to Cuba’s National Bureau of Statistics, nearly 26% of the population was aged 60 or older by the end of 2024, almost double the Latin American regional average of 14.2% reported by the U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).Over the past five years, Cuba’s population has declined by nearly 1.5 million people, largely due to migration, reducing the island’s resident population from 11.1 million to about 9.7 million.</p>



<p>The impact is visible across Havana, where elderly people often wait alone in long lines for rationed bread and rice or search through refuse for recyclable materials and food scraps.The severity of the problem has prompted the Cuban government to authorize private entrepreneurs to operate elder care services and residential facilities, a notable shift in a system historically dominated by state control.</p>



<p>Casado said she still considers herself fortunate. She remains physically independent, walks without assistance and manages her household alone in a deteriorating 19th-century building in the capital.Born in 1942, she lived through the Cuban Revolution, the 1962 missile crisis and the severe economic collapse that followed the fall of the Soviet Union in the 1990s.</p>



<p>Like many of her generation, she said she continues to support the government despite worsening living conditions and attributes much of the country’s hardship to U.S. policy.“We’re doing everything we can here to move the country forward,” she said. “But the thing is, we have a very powerful enemy, and he’s right there, right on our doorstep.</p>
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		<title>Second Filipino Killed in Middle East Conflict as Missile Hits Haifa Home</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2026/04/64817.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[NewsDesk MC]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 06:20:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Missile attack]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[remittances]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seafarers crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Strait of Hormuz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tel aviv embassy]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[Manila— The Philippines confirmed on Tuesday that a second national has been killed in the ongoing Middle East conflict after]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p><strong>Manila</strong>— The Philippines confirmed on Tuesday that a second national has been killed in the ongoing Middle East conflict after a missile struck a residential building in Haifa, where the victim lived with her Israeli family.</p>



<p><br>The Department of Foreign Affairs said the woman died on Sunday “alongside her Israeli husband and elderly parents-in-law” when the home was hit. Israeli rescue services reported recovering four bodies from the rubble following the strike, which was attributed to an Iranian missile attack.</p>



<p><br>Local media identified the Filipino victim by her given name, Lucille-Jean, stating that she and her family were pulled from the collapsed residence after hours of rescue operations.</p>



<p><br>The Philippine embassy in Tel Aviv has notified the victim’s relatives and is coordinating assistance, including efforts to repatriate her remains despite ongoing travel disruptions in the region.</p>



<p><br>The death marks the second confirmed Filipino fatality since hostilities escalated following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran in late February. Mary Ann Velasquez De Vera, a 32-year-old caregiver, was killed on March 1 while attempting to bring her elderly ward to a bomb shelter.</p>



<p><br>The conflict has placed an estimated two million Filipinos living and working across the Middle East at risk, many of whom are employed as domestic workers or in maritime roles. The Philippines relies heavily on remittances sent home by overseas workers, making the situation a growing concern for authorities in Manila.</p>



<p><br>Thousands of Filipino seafarers remain stranded amid heightened risks in the Strait of Hormuz, where shipping activity has been severely disrupted. Philippine officials said Iran had pledged to allow safe passage for Filipino vessels and crew, though no clear timeline has been provided.</p>



<p><br>Meanwhile, Donald Trump reiterated warnings that the United States could target Iranian infrastructure if tensions continue to escalate, as diplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire remain unresolved.</p>
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