90 Slaves, Including Kids, Are Freed in Brazil

Slaves


Two teams from the Special Mobile Inspection Group of the Ministry of Labor and Employment freed 90 workers this week who were living in slave-like conditions. In the Airport Ranch, in the municipality of Sinop, in the state of Mato Grosso, 53 persons were discovered living in subhuman conditions.

Three of them were children digging up roots. The workers who were freed were living in miserable housing, with bad food and without signed working papers. Three weapons were also found in the locale.


In the Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception ranch, in the municipality of Formoso do Rio Preto, 37 workers were also freed, two of them minors under 18 years of age.


Everything they consumed was bought on the ranch, where the prices were higher than normal, which charaterizes a debt cycle among the workers.


The supervisor of the Federal Police, Pablo Camargo Nezzedimi, brought a suit accusing the owners of the ranches of reducing the workers’ conditions to slavery, forming a gang, and false recruitment of labor.


Labor Rights


Earlier this month, Brazilian experts and members of the International Labor Organization (ILO) began their evaluation of the commitments and application of declarations of basic labor principles and rights in Brazil, as well as in the context of Mercosur integration.


The items on the agenda included the campaign against slave-like and child labor, discrimination in the workplace, and respect for labor union freedom.


The goal is to obtain an evaluation of the degree of compliance with the national plan of labor commitments, fruit of the Mercosur’s regional integration agreement, and especially the application of the ILO’s Declaration and the observance of basic labor rights.


The discussions should provide elements for the 14th International Conference of Ministers of Labor, scheduled for Argentina, in November, 2005.


According to Armand Pereira, director of the ILO in Brazil, the Brazilian Ministry of Labor has done a significant job in the area of work and employment. As to slave-like labor, he believes that the Brazilian government has been making meaningful efforts to combat it.


Evaluation by the ILO is one of the items determined by the 13th International Conference of Ministers of Labor, held in Salvador, Bahia, in 2003. In November of this year, it was Peru’s turn to be inspected. The report will be available in January, 2005.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Slaps 6% Tax on Foreign Investors to Reduce Speculators’ Appetite

While the Brazilian currency real keeps on appreciating against the American dollar, Brazilian minister ...

Rayfran Sales Confesses He Killed US Nun

A military helicopter arrived in Altamira from Anapu with Rayfran das Neves Sales aboard. ...

Brazil Domestic Demand Heats Up and Industry Grows 6%

Brazil's industry ended the first ten months of 2007 with an accumulated growth rate ...

Old Plan, Old River

California and Israel have been used as inspiration for several irrigation plans in the ...

Italy Goes to Brazil to Build Ports and Railroads

Brazil’s Minister of Planning, Budget, and Management, Guido Mantega, signed an agreement, October 28, ...

Brazil Outraged by Suggestion that New Air Accident Is Matter of Time

The head of an international air traffic controllers organization who said that it was ...

US Missionary Murdered in Brazil Gets UN Human Rights Prize

Dorothy Stang, an American nun murdered in Brazil three years ago and the slain ...

Beachfront house in Ubatuba, São Paulo, Brazil

Quite a Few Reasons Why Americans Should Move to Brazil

Why have I moved from checking the pulse of Asia to revisiting South America? ...

Brazil Bishop Calls River Transposition Project Antiethic

During a hearing held last week at the Brazilian Senate on the São Francisco ...

Brazil, After All, Had Big Role in Overthrowing Chile’s Allende, in 1973

It was 1971. Then Brazil's dictator, general Emilio Garrastazu Médici and US president Richard ...