April 9, 2005: Headlines: COS - Philippines: The Standard: Former American Peace Corps worker Don Herrington is one of thousands who approach retirement and decide that a place beside a tropical beach is better than staying put in Hong Kong, or going back to wherever ``home'' used to be. He is now in what he (and very few others) call the Paris of the Philippines, Cebu.
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April 9, 2005: Headlines: COS - Philippines: The Standard: Former American Peace Corps worker Don Herrington is one of thousands who approach retirement and decide that a place beside a tropical beach is better than staying put in Hong Kong, or going back to wherever ``home'' used to be. He is now in what he (and very few others) call the Paris of the Philippines, Cebu.
Former American Peace Corps worker Don Herrington is one of thousands who approach retirement and decide that a place beside a tropical beach is better than staying put in Hong Kong, or going back to wherever ``home'' used to be. He is now in what he (and very few others) call the Paris of the Philippines, Cebu.
Former American Peace Corps worker Don Herrington is one of thousands who approach retirement and decide that a place beside a tropical beach is better than staying put in Hong Kong, or going back to wherever ``home'' used to be. He is now in what he (and very few others) call the Paris of the Philippines, Cebu.
Property and the exotic promise
Graham Lees
Weekend: April 9-10, 2005
AFP
[Excerpt]
If you're an aging Hong Kong expat - or even a native, jaded by decades of living cheek-by-jowl 20 storeys up a Mid-Levels concrete canyon, a vacation or retirement home in the verdant jungles and beaches of Southeast Asia may start to look pretty good.
But immigration laws can be complicated and they vary from country to country. The legal system is usually rigged in favor of the locals, construction quality can be slipshod, the unwary are easily cheated and service isn't going to be anything like you expect in Hong Kong.
Nonetheless, thousands of expat-riates, called ``silver-hair migrants'' in Malaysia, are flocking like sunbirds to warmer climates. Nor are they just 'kanos or putihs or farangs, depending on what they call Caucasians in each country. An increasing number are from China and Japan.
Former American Peace Corps worker Don Herrington is one of thousands who approach retirement and decide that a place beside a tropical beach is better than staying put in Hong Kong, or going back to wherever ``home'' used to be. He is now in what he (and very few others) call the Paris of the Philippines, Cebu.
``Some foreigners are here in the Philippines as investors, staying on tourist visas and extending their stay for long periods of time,'' says Herrington, who has been married three times, each to Filipinas, and has set himself up as a one-man advisory bureau with his own Internet-based membership club (www.livinginthephilippines.com). ``Some are tourists who came and forgot to leave the Philippine paradise they found.''
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Story Source: The Standard
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Philippines
PCOL19697
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AM SEARCHING FOR PEACECORPS FRIEND CALLED MARTIN NEWPORT WHO WAS IN SIRRA LEONE AND LEFT IN 1979. HE WAS IN GANDORHUN ,KONO DISTRICT. HERE IS MY ADRESS christianafillie@yahoo.com. THIS IS MY PHONE NO. +232 77 55 8476. MARTIN WAS MY BEST FRIEND AND I WANT TO BE CONNECTED TO HIM AGAIN. I LOST HIS ADDRESS DURING THE WAR.