Brazil Frees 2,000 Slave Workers. Another 25,000 to Go.

One of the biggest challenges presently faced by organizations that fight against slave-like labor in Brazil is obtaining approval for the Constitutional Amendment bill proposal (PEC) dealing with the expropriation of properties where enslaved workers are found.

“Some of the challenges have mostly to do with operational and administrative questions, but others are related to the progress of the Constitutional Amendment proposal which deals with the expropriation of lands and is still being discussed in the National Congress,” commented the Secretary of Labor Inspection of the Ministry of Labor and Employment (MTE), Ruth Vilela.


Since January the MTE’s Mobile Inspection Group has managed to visit over 241 farms and free over 2,000 rural workers.


According to a survey conducted by the Catholic Church’s Land Pastoral Commission (CPT), there are still around 25 thousand workers in Brazil who are forced to perform unpaid labor.


“At this moment, the monitoring is precisely to verify whether, after the initial inspection findings, there was a recurrence or not,” Vilela explained.


Despite the difficulties, she said, since the National Plan to Combat Slave Labor was launched in 2003, the mobilization of the partners that are trying to end slave-like labor in the country’s rural areas can be considered a victory.


“The process of reorganization by our partners, in the sense of their all having a task force on this matter, greater resourcefulness in the execution of measures, and, most of all, the effectuation of these partnerships occurred in a responsible and effective manner,” she affirmed.


For the adviser at the Special Secretariat of Human Rights (SEDH), Raquel Cunha, the pressure applied by the Ministry, the Federal Police, the Public Interest Defense Ministry for Labor, and the Secretariat itself has succeeded in inhibiting the activities of some landowners.


They fear the inclusion of their names on the national register (known as the “black list”), which could cause them to forfeit their lands.


“Some have become more conscientious, while others are more frightened, because of the black list,” Cunha observed.


She recalls that, to fortify the campaign against slave-like labor, it is necessary to mobilize not just the government agencies but the partners and society, too.


Among the steps that are being implemented are prizes for personalities and organizations active in this campaign.


Sociologist Ana de Souza Pinto, “Aninha of the CPT,” who has been engaged in the battle against rural violence for over 30 years, and the Açailândia (MA) Center for the Defense of Life and Human Rights, which has devoted itself to the campaign against slave-like labor in the state’s charcoal kilns, will receive the 2004 Human Rights award from President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on December 10.


“We concluded that awarding the prize [to the Açailândia Center] would not only acknowledge the job that was done but would contribute to strengthening the institution in the sense of its continuing to work in behalf of the victims of slave-like labor,” Cunha contended.


Another initiative is the II Round of Debates on Slave-like Labor, scheduled to take place on November 23-24. The purpose of this gathering is to reflect on the accomplishments and difficulties of the National Plan to Combat Slave Labor.


Agência Brasil
Translator: David Silberstein

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Dream: College for All

An alert from Brazil’s Minister of Education, Cristovam Buarque: the current social remoteness of ...

This Brazilian’s Passion for Flowers Bloomed into a Prosperous Business

Flower grower Eulália Farrath manages a flower and ornamental plant production farm in the ...

Banned in the US and EU, Asbestos and Agrotoxics Are Welcomed in Brazil

In recent years, Brazil has become the main destination for agrotoxic products banned in ...

How Brazil Found a Way to Rearrange the Budget Mandated by the Constitution

Promulgated in 1988, Brazil’s most recent constitution made significant advances in revenue sharing. The ...

2004, a Banner Year for Brazil’s Coops

The cooperatives from the state of São Paulo, in the Southeast of Brazil, had ...

Brazilian state-controlled Petrobras

Petrobras’s US$ 2 Bi Investment in the South of Brazil to Create 60,000 Jobs

Petrobras is investing US$ 2.1 billion in the Presidente Getúlio Vargas refinery (Repar), located ...

Brazil’s Industry Leads Best Growth in 9 Years

The Brazilian Gross Domestic Product(GDP) rose 5.3% from January to September this year. This ...

Despite Weak Dollar Sales Up 11% at Brazil’s Perdigí£o

Brazilian food company Perdigão reported net sales of R$ 1.2 billion in the first ...

Brazil Says Air Traffic Breakdown Doesn’t Seem to Be Sabotage

A Lan Airlines SA plane was forced to make an unscheduled landing in São ...

Brazil’s Electricity Sector Ready for 5% Annual Growth

The Brazilian electricity sector is prepared for the national economy to grow at an ...