You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Saturday, April 29, 2017

Gobal Expatriate Survey

Hi everyone!
I am Miriam, a former expat who lived in the Philippines and other SEA countries until recently. I am doing my MSc in Organizational Behaviour at a London University and would tremendously appreciate it if you could take just a few minutes to take part in my survey. I am looking for expats who work in non-governmental or non-profit organizations (NGOs/NPOs) in developing countries. The survey looks at expatriate type (sent by an organization or self-initiated), marital status (single or married) and their impact on the organizational commitment profile.
A better understanding of how you relate to your organization can help in understanding potential thoughts of leaving the organization. A general understanding of the commitment profiles of expats can help NGOs and NPOs in developing countries to better manage and look after expats in their organizations.
The survey takes only a few minutes to fill in. This is the link to mysurveyhttps://bbk.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/expatriatecommitmentngonpo
Your responses will remain confidential and anonymous, and you will not be required to provide your name, any other identifying information or to sign up. No individual data will be published. If you have any questions, do let me know (mfranz02@mail.bbbk.ac.uk).
Thank you so much! I really appreciate every person who takes part in the survey.

Hallo alle zusammen!
Ich bin Miriam und habe bis vor Kurzem in Suedostasien und auf den Philippinen als Expat gelebt. Derzeit bin ich in England und schreibe an meiner Masterarbeit (Master in Organisationsverhalten) zu der Frage, ob der Beziehungsstatus (ledig oder verheiratet) und der Expatriate-Type (mit einer Organisation ins Einsatzland geschickt oder auf eigene Initiative (ohne Unterstuetzung einer Organisation abgereist)) einen Einfluss auf die Organisationsbindungsprofile von Expatriates in Nichtregierungsorganisationen (NGOs) und gemeinnuetzigen Organisationen (NPOs) in Entwicklungslaendern hat?
Ausganspunkt ist, dass es kaum Vergleiche zu Unterschieden zwischen den beiden Expatriate-Typen in NGOs/NPOs in Entwicklungslaendern gibt. Ein besseres Verstaendnis der Einfluesse auf die Organisationsbindung kann jedoch Organisationen helfen besser auf ihre Expatriate-Mitarbeiter eingestellt zu sein und diese besser zu unterstuetzen. Expatriates selbst kann ein besseres Verstaendnis ihres Organisationsbindungsprofiles helfen moegliche verfruehte Abreiseintentionen oder Wechsel zu einer anderen Organisation besser zu verstehen.
Die Umfrage ist auf Englisch und dauert nur ein paar Minuten. Es werden keine Namen (weder persoenliche, noch die von Organisationen), E-Mailaddresse, oder aehnliche Informationen abgefragt. Jeder Teilnehmer bleibt anonym und es werden keine individuellen Daten veroeffentlicht.
Dies ist der Link zur Umfrage: https://bbk.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/expatriatecommitmentngonpo Sie dauert nur ein paar Minuten.
Bei Fragen stehe ich gerne zur Verfuegung (mfranz02@mail.bbk.ac.uk)

Vielen Dank! Ich schaetze jeden, der an der Umfrage teilnimmt sehr!

Wives wanted in the Faroe Islands

Wives wanted in the Faroe Islands

  • 27 April 2017
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  • From the sectionMagazine
Athaya Slaetalid with husband Jan and their son Jacob
Image captionAthaya Slaetalid with husband Jan and their son Jacob
There's a shortage of women in the Faroe Islands. So local men are increasingly seeking wives from further afield - Thailand and the Philippines in particular. But what's it like for the brides who swap the tropics for this windswept archipelago?
When Athaya Slaetalid first moved from Thailand to the Faroe Islands, where winter lasts six months, she would sit next to the heater all day:
"People told me to go outside because the sun was shining but I just said: 'No! Leave me alone, I'm very cold.'"
Moving here six years ago was tough for Athaya at first, she admits. She'd met her husband Jan when he was working with a Faroese friend who had started a business in Thailand.
Jan knew in advance that bringing his wife to this very different culture, weather and landscape would be challenging.
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Faroe Islands

Find out more

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"I had my concerns, because everything she was leaving and everything she was coming to were opposites," he admits. "But knowing Athaya, I knew she would cope."
There are now more than 300 women from Thailand and Philippines living in the Faroes. It doesn't sound like a lot, but in a population of just 50,000 people they now make up the largest ethnic minority in these 18 islands, located between Norway and Iceland.
In recent years the Faroes have experienced population decline, with young people leaving, often in search of education, and not returning. Women have proved more likely to settle abroad. As a result, according to Prime Minister Axel Johannesen, the Faroes have a "gender deficit" with approximately 2,000 fewer women than men.
This, in turn, has lead Faroese men to look beyond the islands for romance. Many, though not all, of the Asian women met their husbands online, some through commercial dating websites. Others have made connections through social media networks or existing Asian-Faroese couples.
For the new arrivals, the culture shock can be dramatic.
Officially part of the Kingdom of Denmark, the Faroes have their own language (derived from Old Norse) and a very distinctive culture - especially when it comes to food. Fermented mutton, dried cod and occasional whale meat and blubber are typical of the strong flavours here, with none of the traditional herbs and spices of Asian cooking.
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And, although it never gets as cold as neighbouring Iceland, the wet, cool climate is a challenge for many people. A good summer's day would see the temperature reach 16°C.
Athaya is a confident woman with a ready smile who now works in the restaurant business in Torshavn, the Faroese capital. She and Jan share a cosy cottage on the banks of a fjord surrounded by dramatic mountains. But she's honest about how difficult swapping countries was at first.
"When our son Jacob was a baby, I was at home all day with no-one to talk to," she says.
Faroe Islands
"The other villagers are older people and mostly don't speak English. People our age were out at work and there were no children for Jacob to play with. I was really alone. When you stay at home here, you really stay at home. I can say I was depressed. But I knew it would be like that for two or three years."
Then, when Jacob started kindergarten, she began working in catering and met other Thai women.
"That was important because it gave me a network. And it gave me a taste of home again."
Krongrak Jokladal felt isolated at first, too, when she arrived from Thailand. Her husband Trondur is a sailor and works away from home for several months at a time.
Krongrak Jokladal
Image captionKrongrak Jokladal
She started her own Thai massage salon in the centre of Torshavn. "You can't work regular hours with a baby, and although my parents-in-law help out with childcare, running the business myself means I can choose my hours," she says.
It's a far cry from Krongrak's previous job as head of an accountancy division in Thai local government.
But she is unusual in that she runs her own business. Even for many highly educated Asian women in the Faroes, the language barrier means they have to take lower-level work.
Axel Johannesen, the prime minister, says helping the newcomers overcome this is something the government takes seriously.
"The Asian women who have come in are very active in the labour market, which is good," he says. "One of our priorities is to help them learn Faroese, and there are government programmes offering free language classes."
Kristjan Arnason and his wife Bunlom
Image captionKristjan and Bunlom Arnason
Kristjan Arnason recalls the effort his Thai wife Bunlom, who arrived in the Faroes in 2002, put into learning the language.
"After a long day at work she would sit reading the English-Faeroese dictionary," he says. "She was extraordinarily dedicated."
"I was lucky," Bunlom adds. "I told Kristjan that if I was moving here he had to find me a job. And he did, and I was working with Faeroese people in a hotel so I had to learn how to talk to them."
In an age when immigration has become such a sensitive topic in many parts of Europe, Faeroes society seems remarkably accepting of foreign incomers.
Media captionChuen and Karsten have been married for just over a year. They met on a dating website called Thai Cupid.
"I think it helps that the immigrants we have seen so far are mostly women," says local politician Magni Arge, who also sits in the Danish parliament, "They come and they work and they don't cause any social problems.
"But we've seen problems when you have people coming from other cultures into places like the UK, in Sweden and in other parts of Europe - even Denmark. That's why we need to work hard at government level to make sure we don't isolate people and have some kind of sub-culture developing."
But Antonette Egholm, originally from the Philippines, hasn't encountered any anti-immigrant sentiment. I met her and her husband as they moved into a new flat in Torshavn.
"People here are friendly, she explains, "and I've never experienced any negative reactions to my being a foreigner. I lived in metro Manila and there we worried about traffic and pollution and crime. Here we don't need to worry about locking the house, and things like healthcare and education are free. At home we have to pay. And here you can just call spontaneously at someone's house, it's not formal. For me, it feels like the Philippines in that way."
Likewise, her husband Regin believes increasing diversity is something that should be welcomed not feared.
"We actually need fresh blood here," he adds, "I like seeing so many children now who have mixed parentage. Our gene pool is very restricted, and it's got to be a good thing that we welcome outsiders who can have families."
He acknowledges that he's had occasional ribbing from some male friends who jokingly ask if he pressed "enter" on his computer to order a wife. But he denies he and Antonette have encountered any serious prejudice as a result of their relationship.
Athaya Slaetalid tells me that some of her Thai friends have asked why she doesn't leave her small hamlet, and move to the capital, where almost 40% of Faroe Islanders now live. They say Jacob would have more friends there.
"No, I don't need to do that," she says. "I'm happy here now, not just surviving but making a life for our family.
"Look," she says, as we step into the garden overlooking the fjord. "Jacob plays next to the beach. He is surrounded by hills covered in sheep and exposed to nature. And his grandparents live just up the road. There is no pollution and no crime. Not many kids have that these days. This could be the last paradise on earth."
Tim Ecott is the author of Stealing Water, Neutral Buoyancy: Adventures in a Liquid World and Vanilla: Travels in Search of the Luscious Substance.
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Friday, April 28, 2017

A burning globe



A burning globe

IN MY OPINIONKlaus Doring
Look around. Just any place on our globe. Yes, it’s burning. Natural disasters, terrorists attacks, war. Will be Asia another one? Heaven forbid – no!
As US, Japanese and South Korean warships carried out joint exercises, Pyongyang marked a national anniversary with an artillery drill. The saber-rattling coincided with a flurry of diplomatic activity in Tokyo.
On Wednesday (April 26, while writing this piece) North Korea conducted a large-scale conventional live-fire military drill in the region of Wonsan on its east coast, South Korea’s Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff confirmed on Tuesday. In a statement, the South’s military said it was “closely monitoring” the situation and “maintaining readiness.”
Indeed, North Korea suffers a  crisis – South Korea remains relaxed! How long?
International concerns have been heightened in recent weeks that the North could soon carry out another nuclear test or missile launch, in defiance of United Nations sanctions. The reclusive country, where 40 percent of the population is undernourished according to the Global Hunger Index, often marks significant anniversaries with shows of military force. Although it was feared a nuclear test or ballistic missile launch might happen on Tuesday, no such test happened during the morning.
The harsh rhetoric continued from Pyongyang, with a top military general repeating that the North was ready to use preemptive strikes to defend itself. “The situation prevailing on the Korean Peninsula is so tense that a nuclear war may break out due to the frantic war drills of the U.S. imperialists and their vassal forces for aggression,” General Pak Yong Sik told a major meeting of senior military and civilian officials.
The North Korea to US is very clear: ‘don’t mess with us’! Meanwhile the US nuclear submarine docks in Busan.
US President Donald Trump has vowed to prevent North Korea from becoming capable of striking the US with a nuclear missile and ruled out nothing including a military strike. As a show of force, he sent the USS Carl Vinson carrier strike group to waters off Korea. The fleet was carrying out drills with Japanese warships.
South Korea’s navy was also carrying out exercises with US destroyers in waters off the Korean peninsula.
As the drills continued, the US Navy said the nuclear-powered guided missile submarine USS Michigan arrived in the South Korean port of Busan on Tuesday. The submarine was not expected to participate in joint naval exercises.
Trump’s UN ambassador Nikki Haley said the US wasn’t looking for a fight with North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un and wouldn’t attack “unless he gives us reason to do something.” She praised China’s increasing pressure on North Korea, seen by Washington as key to reigning in Pyongyang’s military ambitions.
Meanwhile we can observe an increased diplomatic activity. Top envoys from Japan, South Korea and the US held talks in Tokyo, with US envoy Joseph Yun saying he and his counterparts agreed to coordinate “all actions” on North Korea. They also agreed China had a key role in pressuring Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear and missile program. According to Japan’s foreign ministry, China’s envoy for North Korea was also due to visit Tokyo for talks.
In my opinion, only peace talks help. Let’s continue praying for peace. Not only in Asia.