For UN Brazil Is a Country of Great Laws that Are Not Enforced

In her preliminary report on human rights in Brazil, the UN rapporteur for Human Rights, the Pakistani, Hina Jilani, said that the country’s Military Police (MP) seemed to be part of the problem.

They frequently use intimidation and even physical force against social movements, she said. In her report she suggested the government "take note of these activities and deal with them." She said it would be essential to have an independent body oversee MP actions.

Jilani went on to say that the Federal Police and other governmental agencies were seen as more trustworthy by the population than the MP.

She added: "While it is true that mechanisms for promoting and protecting human rights exist on paper, they do not always have the desired practical results."

The report also called for "urgent" adjustments in the country’s judicial system in order to make it more responsive to the social clauses in the constitution and in the legislature where there was a need for more pro-active human rights promotion.

Jilani concluded by expressing the hope an "open process" would be implemented to resolve land disputes without "political polarization." She declared that an end to impunity for those who commit crimes against human rights was very important.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Baby Incubator Leader Is in 60 Countries

Medical-hospital and laboratory equipment manufacturer Fanem plans to install an assembly line in one ...

IMF Gets Money and Gives Some Advice to Brazil on Trade Barriers

Even after Brazil paid off its debt with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), their ...

Brazilian Referenda and Plebiscites Are Quite Undemocratic

Maria Victoria Benevides, professor of sociology and political science at the University of São ...

Brazil Calls EU Trade Commissioner Explanations in Hong Kong a Sham

The third day of negotiations at the 6th Ministerial Meeting of the World Trade ...

U.S. Consumer Price Hike Depresses Brazil Market

Brazilian and Latin American equities gave back most of the gains earned yesterday. A ...

Indians Get a Stronger Voice on Brazil’s Politics

In an interview with National AM Radio, professor PatrÀ­cia Melo, who teaches history at ...

Brazilian Indians Lose their Roadside Camp to Fire and Are Threatened with Death

A fire has raged through a Guarani roadside camp, in Brazil, forcing the Indians ...

It’s War

According to the United Nations, a country with more than 50 murders a year ...

Brazilians Got 1.1 Million New Jobs Last Year, 350,000 Less than in 2008

Brazil’s Minister of Labor, Carlos Lupi, presented some preliminary numbers on employment in 2009 ...

Intimacy Show-Off

Producer Patrícia Drummond explains the phenomenon: "What makes the biggest success on the Internet ...