BARCELONA, Spain — Paperless Filipino workers here each got
pieces of paper hoping that these help them regularize their immigration
status in Spain and in the country’s Catalan region.
"Good thing the passport number [in my diploma] is correct," said
irregular migrant Julia (not her real name) after shaking hands with her
teachers and with officials of the Church-run Centro Filipino Tuluyan
San Benito that has been running thrice-a-year
idioma (language) classes for 20 years.
Her diploma, printed in a white, ordinary A4 bond paper, certified that
Julia finished a certain level of Spanish language instruction.
There had been increasing demands for slots in Centro Filipino’s
idioma
classes, says Centro president Paulita Astillero, given new regulations
that a migrant cannot renew one’s r
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