Brazilian Women Denounce Eco and Work Violations in the Amazon

In an open letter approved by around 300 female rural workers at the most recent meeting of the Brazilian MIQCB (Movimento Interestadual das Quebradeiras de Coco Babaçu – Interstate Movement of Babassu Coconut Splitters) concern was expressed over the high index of destruction of babassu palm groves.

Tags:

You May Also Like

No News on Kidnapped Brazilian Reporter After Globo Airs Organized Crimes’s Tape

More than 12 hours after having broadcasted a video containing a message of the ...

US AIDS Foundation Applauds Brazil for Defeating Abbott on AIDS Drug

US-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the American largest HIV/AIDS healthcare, prevention and education provider, ...

Brazil President Says She Doesn’t Want Revenge, But She Won’t Forgive Her Torturers

Brazil’s Benoni de Arruda Albernaz, an army captain and the head of an interrogators ...

ILO Praises the Way Brazil Is Dealing with Slave Labor

The “Global Alliance Against Slave Labor” report affirms that measures taken by the Brazilian ...

Dubai’s Default Doesn’t Worry Brazil Who Says It’s Loaded with Reserves

The president of Brazil's Central Bank (BC), Henrique Meirelles, said this Friday, November 27, ...

It’s Cultural. Police Alone Will Not Solve Violence, Says Brazil’s Lula

Brazilians angered by gang violence that rocked South America’s largest city demonstrated across the ...

Brazil Wants Debt Relief from World for Investing in Education

Immediately after the announcement of the UNESCO Index of Educational Development, ranking Brazil 72nd ...

Brazil’s Offer to Mediate in Venezuela-Colombia Conflict Vetoed by Chavez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez rejected on Friday a Brazilian proposal for a joint border ...

Brazil Praises Encounter Between Lula and EC President

Brazil’s Minister of Finance, Antônio Palocci, said that the  Janunary 28 meeting between Brazilian ...

Brazil’s Congress Back to Its US Parrot Role to Deride Chavez

Some legislative figures in Brazilian capital BrasÀ­lia, who at times apparently confuse their country ...