Brazil’s New List of Employers Using Slaves Is Out. There Are 175 Names

Brazilian slave workers The Brazilian Public Defense has released a new listing of employers involved in slave work in Brazil. According to the Labor Ministry (MET), the "dirty list", as it is called is an updated version of a most recent one, inserting 13 new employers, reiterating 4 and excluding 34 previous names due to a judicial decision.

The collected data includes 175 people amongst individuals and private businesses.

The report is updated every semester, and lists employers who can no longer appeal, as a final verdict has already been reached. On the other hand, it excludes previously listed names, once it is verified by the Ministry that discrepancies have been corrected and lawbreakers have no longer perpetrated the crime.

"By providing information on those infringing the law, who are exploiting workers under the condition of slavery, we are allowing various government entities to establish public initiatives. For example, no bank can approve the lending of public funds, knowing that someone who is listed on this report is infringing the law", informed Marcelo Campos, Advisor for the Secretariat of Labor Inspection for the Labor Ministry.

"In addition to that, such data is important as a referential for society in general, who can demand the implementation of public initiatives, functioning in this case as a mechanism of social control as well,"
concluded Campos.

According to the Ministry, the main reason why some names still appear in the compiled data is due to the non-payment of penalties, repeated occurrence or legal action still being disputed in court. Those whose names appear on the listing are unable to obtain any public or private credit line.

In order for someone to have their name excluded from the report, the Ministry will need new evidence that everything is now in order, including direct and indirect monitoring of the properties in question, local investigation, government and non-government agencies analysis, besides any additional paperwork from the Secretariat of Labor Inspection.

You can see listing of names at @ http://www.mte.gov.br/trab_escravo/lista_2009_07_22.pdf

Edison Bernardo DeSouza is a journalist, having graduated in Social Communication Studies at Pontifical Catholic University in São Paulo, Brazil. He lived in the US and Canada for close to 12 years and participated in volunteering activities in social works agencies. DeSouza currently lives in São Paulo where he teaches English as a Second Language for both private English Language Institute and Private High-School. He has already participated as an actor in three English plays in Brazil and is pursuing further advancements in his career. He is particularly interested in economics, history, politics and human rights articles.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian in Charge of UN Disarmament Program

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has named a career Brazilian diplomat to advance the United ...

U.S. GDP Scares Brazil’s Bulls

Brazilian and Latin American equities continued to falter, as weakness in the U.S. negatively ...

Brazil Caught Unprepared for Amazon’s Catastrophic Drought

Home to the greatest variety of life on Earth, the Amazon is both the ...

Bull Times for Brazilian Beef

Revenues from Brazilian beef exports in the month of September reached US$ 241 million, ...

Wholesale Changes in Brazil: Ministers Fired, Ministries Closed

More changes have been made in the government of President Luiz Inácio Lula da ...

Disappointed Brazil Wants WTO to Keep Trying to Reach Global Agreement

Pascal Lamy, the head of the World Trade Organization admitted  that the marathon talks ...

Brazil Gets US$ 2 Billion Forex Surplus and Slows Down Dollar Buys

Brazil’s foreign exchange surplus (Forex), i.e. the sum of dollar inflow and outflow into ...

Rest in Peace, Brazil’s Old Warrior!

Leonel Brizola lost an election, lost another, and then modestly became the vice presidential ...

LETTERS

Of all changes occurred in the last two decades, the most impressive was the ...

Something Wrong with Brazil’s Interest Rates

Interest rates are currently on the rise in Brazil. Earlier this week the Central ...