All necessary assistance will be provided to the survivors and the families of the missing Filipino crew members of the ill-fated cargo ship that sank off the coast of Japan, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III said on Saturday, September 5.
Bello said the government is extending all necessary assistance to the Filipino crewmen, saying they have been coordinating with the families.
He added that considering that all crew members are active members of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, they are entitled to all benefits and assistance for distressed members.
“We are in touch with the next of kin of the crew and we are providing them all the help we can give, including the latest information on the search and rescue operation for our kababayans being done by Japanese authorities,” Bello said.
“We are updating the relatives of our unfortunate Filipino crewmen every time we receive information from the Japanese Coast Guard who is on top of the search and rescue operation,” Bello added.
The secretary identified the second survivor of the capsized Gulf Livestock 1 as Jay-Nel Rosales, 30, from Cebu. Rosales, a deck crew, was rescued by patrol boat Kaimon.
He “is now stable and able to walk on his own,” according to a report from the Philippine Overseas Labor Office in Osaka.
Rosales, who was taken to the Kagoshima-ken Kenritsu Ooshima Hospital for a complete medical check up, was already able to talk with his family in Cebu, Bello said.
The first to be rescued was the ship’s chief officer Eduardo Sareno, from Oslob, Cebu. He remains at the hospital and will be brought to a hotel for his quarantine later this week. Sareno was also provided with a mobile phone to communicate with his family in the Philippines.
A body, believed to be of another Filipino crewman, was fished out off the waters. POLO said the identity of the body has yet to be ascertained.