Unemployed Filipina feeds other jobless migrants in Dubai

Feby Cachero Baguisa Dela Pena of Laguna, Philippines, hands out free food to those who need it in Dubai. (AP)
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Updated 11 June 2020
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Unemployed Filipina feeds other jobless migrants in Dubai

  • Her 11 housemates also chipped in
  • She offers 200 free meals each day

DUBAI: Feby Dela Peña saw her fellow Filipinos standing in line outside her building in Dubai, waiting for free food. And she was stricken — what if her family, too, had lost their income amid the COVID-19 outbreak? How would she have fed her three children?
Dela Peña is unemployed. “We’re poor, to be honest,” she said. “But it’s not a reason for me not to help, you know?”


So the next day, she pulled out the money that was supposed to feed her family of five for a month. When their 11 housemates got wind of her plan — like most migrant workers in Dubai, the family lives in a shared apartment — those who could chipped in as well.
She was able to buy about 500 dirhams, or $136, worth of groceries, including 30 frozen chickens and sacks of rice. And she began to cook.
That is how Dela Peña launched the project she calls Ayuda — help, in Filipino, a language heavily influenced by Spanish colonial rule. Each day, she offers 200 free meals to the hungry.


Migrants account for 90% of the workforce in the United Arab Emirates. The economic shutdown that came with COVID-19 has hit their communities hard.
“Life is so hard and they don’t have anyone to depend on,” said Dela Peña, 34.
Dela Peña’s a confident cook who used to sell home-made meals to friends as a way to earn extra money. She said she also has a license in food safety.
But cooking 200 meals a day is a massive undertaking, especially with a 6-year-old, a toddler and a baby at home.
The finances are dicey; Dela Peña relies on her husband’s modest income from a sales job. But when word of her efforts spread on social media, people began reaching out, dropping off cartons of eggs and bags of rice. An influential Emirati blogger gave her 10,000 dirhams ($2,700).

She leans on her housemates, husband and her brother-in-law, who was let go from his job in a tea shop amid the pandemic, to help with buying the groceries, thawing the meats, chopping the food and cooking. Ultimately, though, she’s in charge.
“It’s a big thing if you can help like 10 people not to sleep hungry,” she said, as she scooped up cooked rice, fried fish and boiled eggs into containers to distribute.
Her children’s wagon is used to deliver the meals each day. It is 3 p.m., and sweltering. A sign on a cardboard box announces: “FREE!!! FOOD FOR EVERYONE.”
Some people walk 45 minutes for one of Dela Peña’s meals. While most hail from the Philippines, there are also Africans, South Asians and others.

Six Filipino women, who come every day, said they haven’t worked or been paid since March when they lost their sales jobs. One of the women, Emma Moraga, said she heard about the meals on social media.
“It’s good, because they can help a lot of people,” Moraga said. “One meal a day, it’s big help.”
The crowd lines up. “Social distancing!” Dela Peña says, repeatedly. Mostly, though, people are standing apart and everyone is wearing masks, as is required by law.


US military operations ‘ahead of schedule,’ Iranian leaders want to talk: Trump

Updated 4 sec ago
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US military operations ‘ahead of schedule,’ Iranian leaders want to talk: Trump

  • Trump also said Sunday that 48 Iranian leaders have been killed in the US-Israeli bombardments
  • Iranian ‌President Masoud Pezeshkian said a ​leadership council had temporarily assumed duties

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on ​Sunday that Iran’s new leadership wants to talk to him and that he has agreed, according to an interview with the Atlantic magazine. 

“They want to talk, and I have agreed to talk, so I will be talking to ‌them. They ‌should have done ​it ‌sooner. ⁠They should have ​given what ⁠was very practical and easy to do sooner. They waited too long,” Trump said in the interview from his Florida residence. Trump did not specify who he would be speaking with or say whether ⁠it would occur on Sunday ‌or Monday.

Iranian ‌President Masoud Pezeshkian said a ​leadership council composed of ‌himself, the judiciary head and a ‌member of the powerful Guardians Council had temporarily assumed the duties of supreme leader following the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Trump said some ‌of the people who were involved in recent talks with the ⁠US are ⁠no longer alive.

“Most of those people are gone. Some of the people we were dealing with are gone, because that was a big — that was a big hit,” he was quoted as saying in the interview with Atlantic staff writer Michael Scherer. “They should have done it sooner, Michael. They could have ​made a ​deal. They should’ve done it sooner. They played too cute.”

Offensive moving ‘ahead of schedule’

Trump also said Sunday that 48 Iranian leaders have been killed in the US-Israeli bombardments of the country and that the offensive is “very positive.”

“Nobody can believe the success we’re having, 48 leaders are gone in one shot. And it’s moving along rapidly,” Trump was quoted as saying in an interview by Fox News.

Trump claimed overall success in the war, which was launched Saturday with the goal of removing Iran’s leadership and destroying its military. Iran has confirmed the death of its supreme leader, Ali Khamenei.

“We’re doing our job not just for us but for the world. And everything is ahead of schedule,” Trump was quoted as saying in a separate interview with CNBC.

“Things are evolving in a very positive way right now, a very positive way,” he said.

The interviews were conducted before the US military for the first time announced casualties in the war: three unidentified service members killed, five seriously wounded and several others more lightly injured.

Central Command (CENTCOM) also announced that the US had sunk an Iranian warship at a dock in the Gulf of Oman.