“Special recruitment” for abroad at BEPO
BOHOL JOB seekers and those from nearby provinces may now try their luck as Bohol Employment
and Placement Office (BEPO) coordinates special recruitment activities for workers willing to try their
luck abroad.
Needed by various agencies in their weeklong recruitment activities from February 18 to 25 at
the BEPO Office of the Capitol are factory workers, domestic helpers, medical staff, nurses, skilled
workers all for Taiwan, Hongkong, United States of America, United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia and Dubai
of the United Arab Emirates.
BEPO has been institutionalized to assist Boholanos seeking work opportunities abroad by coursing
these facilitation through the correct government channels thereby cutting on red tape and
streamlining the process to make the paper trail as transparent, BEPO sources briefly describe their
tasks.
To fully extend their mandates, BEPO also facilitated job fairs and one-stop shop services by allied
government services to make sure workers can get their important documents on the same place at
the fair venue.
For February 18, Grand Placement Agency seeks applicants for factory workers for Taiwan, BEPO
through Romulo Tagaan said in a communication.
On the 22nd and 23rd of the same month, R.V. Tria International Recruitment Agency would be
screening for domestic helpers to Hongkong.
By the 23rd, another agency: Greenfields International Manpower Inc. seeks workers as medical staff
for hospitals in the US, domestic helpers, nurses and skilled workers for United Kingdom and the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
On February 25, IUPP Inc would be screening for various jobs for United Arab Emirates, especially for
assignment in Dubai.
Bohol, a largely skilled work exporting province has earned a spot in the country’s finances with
the once biggest foreign currency remittance from overseas workers posted at the local Philippine
National Bank, said sources from the Bohol Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
Now into brisk tourism industry activities, still many Boholanos are seeking work abroad knowing that
any savings they can scrape goes on to tourism related investments. (racPIABohol)