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  1. #11

    luoy pud ang bata pro nkasala man pud ang iya parents..

  2. #12
    luoy...pro they have broken laws...

  3. #13
    Noriko was granted 1 year special resident visa renewable every year, unya iyang parents kay gihatagan sad special landing permit sa Japan to visit their daughter for a short period of time. Gibuhat-buhatan nalang sila ug special visas tungod siguro nalooy nalang sad ang Japan nila. Unsa man sad ni iyang parents nga wala man gyud gipaninguha nga kahibalo sad mo tagalog ila anak. Naay at least 500 nga the same case nila sa Japan. Naa naman usa ka case nga na grant gyud apil ang parents to stay sa Japan kay ang ila anak pagkadakpan kay junior college ( 18-20 yrs old) na. Gi consider sa judge nga maglisod na daw adjust ang anak kung pauli-on pa. Ang sa case ni Noriko kay dali pa man daw maka adjust kay bata pa man siya 13 yrs old pa.

    Looy gyud biya ilang case pero usahay lang tungod na siguro sa paninguha para lang ma approve ila stay sa Japan halos maka ingon ka sa ila reasoning nga ang Pilipinas is not a nice place to live in for them mao maglagot sad ka usahay sa mogawas nga news.

  4. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by crinkle View Post
    definitely.

    di ko mu tuo na di na kahibaw mu tagalog ang bata. grabe pod. both her parents are pinoys gud. pinoy to pinoy conversations in japan are spoken in filipino. naa pa'y mas daghan sa Japan and other countries where TnTs have stayed longer than 2 decades without getting caught.

    for me gani, i don't see any reason why the kid should stay. her parents violated the law. some people have to live with punishments why should they be spared? and it's not like any of them would go to prison or something, diba?

    having lived in japan that long, it's expected that they've earned enough to make a decent living here in pinas, unless if they never thought of leaving that country.
    its very possible, bro nga tinuod gyud ni dili kahibalo mo tagalog ila anak. daghan kaayo mi kaila mga pinoy sa simbahan nga ilang anak dili gyud maka speak ug tagalog pero makasabot gamay kung imo istoryahan ug tagalog. Ang ako gani anak nga 5 yrs old na karon unya 1 yr palang nag eskwela ug kindergarten kung magduwa nga siya ra usa kay pulos na nihonggo mogawas sa baba. Mao bisaya gyud amo i-istorya niya perme mix gamay english para lang sad maanad siya gamay english kay unsaon nalang puhon ug mouli nata diha puhon unya atong anak dili kahibalo bisaya ug english mao ra ba gyud na method of instruction sa schools diha sa ato ang english. looy kaayo ang bata noon, sama sa case aning Noriko pinoy pero wala gyud siya nagtuo nga pinoy siya. sala gyud kaayo sa parents ning ingon ani labi na "bilog" gud sila. Dapat man gud agapan nimo ang bata sa ato native language kay kung dili mas ma fluent gyud na language gigamit sa ila school.

  5. #15
    Quote Originally Posted by k.A.i View Post
    mao ng daghan mogara kay daghan kaayong mga malooy/mga buotan....

    so, kung daghan tao mag ingon ana, musogt nalang diay na pirmi ang japan kay daghan malooy?

    diha raba na magsugod after giving a second chance, mo abuso dayon.

    nganung gipa-abot paman na nila ug 17 years oi,
    pagsakop nga fake passport, ipadeport dayon!!

    opinion ko lang

    global crisis naman karon so ang laws nila against illegal immigrants g.panngusgan og maau!!!
    gusto sa japanese govt. nga kadaghanan mag trabaho sa japan mga japanese people para masalavar ilang economy..

    the family deserves to be deported back to the philippines..

  6. #16
    makalagot pud baya ning mga tawo na ni-enter through the backdoor...unfair para namo na naninguha gyud na makasulod sa foreign na country in an honest and lawful manner...

    MIRISI!

    damn! ila pa gyud gi-gamit ilang anak as an 'anchor' to keep them in the country...

  7. #17
    Quote Originally Posted by gpcortes07 View Post
    its very possible, bro nga tinuod gyud ni dili kahibalo mo tagalog ila anak. daghan kaayo mi kaila mga pinoy sa simbahan nga ilang anak dili gyud maka speak ug tagalog pero makasabot gamay kung imo istoryahan ug tagalog. Ang ako gani anak nga 5 yrs old na karon unya 1 yr palang nag eskwela ug kindergarten kung magduwa nga siya ra usa kay pulos na nihonggo mogawas sa baba. Mao bisaya gyud amo i-istorya niya perme mix gamay english para lang sad maanad siya gamay english kay unsaon nalang puhon ug mouli nata diha puhon unya atong anak dili kahibalo bisaya ug english mao ra ba gyud na method of instruction sa schools diha sa ato ang english. looy kaayo ang bata noon, sama sa case aning Noriko pinoy pero wala gyud siya nagtuo nga pinoy siya. sala gyud kaayo sa parents ning ingon ani labi na "bilog" gud sila. Dapat man gud agapan nimo ang bata sa ato native language kay kung dili mas ma fluent gyud na language gigamit sa ila school.
    i know what you mean. naa pod ko friend sa Saitama na gi nihongo jud iyang anak kay pirmi xa out of town nya iya ra bana'ng hapon ang pirmi ma bilin with the kid. but for pinoy parents not to teach their kid their own language? what kind of joke is that? why would they do that anyway? they're illegal aliens in that country gud. they should know better.

    since they're granting special visas to the kid and her parents, di ma dugay manggawas na ni'ng ubang mga TnT with similar issues... or worse, mas ma "inspire" ang mga TnT to stay in japan and have kids. use them as passports to the visa. toink.

  8. #18
    Quote Originally Posted by crinkle View Post
    i know what you mean. naa pod ko friend sa Saitama na gi nihongo jud iyang anak kay pirmi xa out of town nya iya ra bana'ng hapon ang pirmi ma bilin with the kid. but for pinoy parents not to teach their kid their own language? what kind of joke is that? why would they do that anyway? they're illegal aliens in that country gud. they should know better.

    since they're granting special visas to the kid and her parents, di ma dugay manggawas na ni'ng ubang mga TnT with similar issues... or worse, mas ma "inspire" ang mga TnT to stay in japan and have kids. use them as passports to the visa. toink.
    mao lagi negligence gyud ni sa part sa parents nga dili na kahibalo ug tagalog ila anak, maybe sobra kayod sa ila work mao wala kaayo time to watch over their kid. Kids in Japan are trained to be very independent sa parents bisan kinder palang gani. Naa gani ko 1 yr old karon nga anak, plano unta namo ibilin nalang ug daycare w/c is open from 730Am to 7PM, nausab nalang amo huna2x oi kay kung mao na amo buhaton sure gyud mi nihonggo sinultihan sa bata. wala man gud mi plan magpermanent resident, nindot gihapon puyo sa ato nga naa ato relatives sa duol.

    ana gyud na buhaton gyud na sa uban nga similar case, so far flexible lagi gihatag nga decision sa duha ka case nga ako nabalitaan. naa sad siguro buhaton nga countermeasure ang japan ani kay naabot naman ni sa UN attention ang case sa mga calderon.

  9. #19
    Quote Originally Posted by rage963 View Post
    global crisis naman karon so ang laws nila against illegal immigrants g.panngusgan og maau!!!
    gusto sa japanese govt. nga kadaghanan mag trabaho sa japan mga japanese people para masalavar ilang economy..

    the family deserves to be deported back to the philippines..
    yup thats true nga super stricto nga ang japan against illegal immigrants. daghan na kaayo pinoy nadakpan unya diretso deport within a week of interrogation kay gi raid ila mga factory gitrabahoan. Naa pud gani nagbalita nga usahay mag house to house pa mangita sa imo passport ug alien card usually sa train stations ra man ni nila buhaton.
    japan govt even offered daw money to some jobless foreigners of japanese ancestry to go home mostly mga taga Brazil ug Peru kay mo cause daw ug serious unemployment problem.

  10. #20
    Noriko Calderon starts school before parent's departure

    A Filipino girl whose parents are under a deportation order became a second-year student at a local junior high school Wednesday prior to her parents’ departure from Japan to the Philippines next Monday. Noriko Calderon, 13, was granted by the government in March special permission to stay for a year. Her parents chose to leave her behind in Japan and return to the Philippines rather than leave as a family.

    ‘‘I would like to make efforts in both study and club activities,’’ said Noriko, who has joined a music club at the Warabi city government-run school in the hope of eventually becoming a dance instructor. In the morning, she left her home in Warabi, Saitama Prefecture, for school, seen off at her home by her parents. Her father, Arlan, 36, said it was good that his daughter would be able to continue to study in Japan.
    Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion

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