Filipino Migrants Detail the Emotional Cost of Separation for Better Future
Filipino migrants share the emotional toll of working abroad, often missing significant family events and milestones. Many work in Doha, Qatar, supporting children who have remained in the Philippines, cared for by relatives.
For more than a decade, Jeffrey Ongoco has watched much of his daughterโs childhood unfold through a screen. The 46-year-old, who works as a document controller for a construction company in Doha, left the Philippines in 2007 for a job in Saudi Arabia before moving to Qatar in 2010. He and his wife work in Doha to support their 16-year-old daughter, who has lived in the Philippines since infancy, cared for by relatives in Bataan province, about 130km (80 miles) northwest of Manila. It was a...