17% of Brazilian Babies Still Don’t Get a Birth Certificate

The Presidential secretary of Human Rights, Mário Mamede, concluded, Thursday, October 27, the defense of the second report evaluating the implementation in Brazil of the International Pact on Civil and Political Rights.

Over the course of two days, before the United Nations (UN) High Commission on Human Rights, in Geneva, Mamede emphasized some of the advances and reported on some of the challenges faced by the country in the area of human rights.

Among the advances, Mamede underscored the creation of the special secretariats for women’s policies and the promotion of racial equality and the national secretariat of human rights.

One of the highlights was the implantation of a remedial quota system for blacks at universities, a measure already adopted by 17 of the country’s public universities.

The Family Grant program also deserved special attention in the report. By the end of next year, this program is expected to reach 11.5 million families, which will have a guaranteed income enabling their children to attend school.

Another conquest, according to Mamede, was the reduction in the number of unregistered children. According to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), in 2002, for every million children born in the country, 24.4% did not have a birth certificate. This index dropped to 17.1% in 2004.

In the educational field, the report calls attention to the distribution of textbooks at the fundamental and secondary levels. 1.026 billion fundamental school textbooks have been distributed over the last ten years, and, altogether, 8.4 million students have been benefited. Also noted were programs to lower illiteracy rates. These programs have taken care of 1.6 million students in the past two years.

The Brazilian defense also showed what has been done to combat slave-like and child labor in Brazil. The Program for the Eradication of Child Labor (PETI) is cited in the report as a policy that is serving 930 thousand children, whose families receive cash payments to remove their children from the labor market.

With regard to people with special needs, Mamede informed that Brazil is among the five most inclusive countries in the Americas, according to a 2003 UN report.

Agrarian disputes in Brazil were another theme presented to the UN. The report shows that rural violence began to abate in 2004. According to the document, there were 42 rural assassinations attributable to agrarian conflicts in 2003, 16 in 2004, and 12 in 2005 (as of September).

All the countries that ratified the International Pact are expected to submit evaluations to the UN on the implementation of the pact in their territories. Besides Brazil, reports were presented this month by Canada, Paraguay, and Italy.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

ILO Wants World to Learn from Brazil’s Labor Court Decisions

Sentences imposed by Brazilian labor courts in cases of exploitation of slave-like labor, child ...

Threatened with Death Rio’s Assemblyman Flees Brazil to Undisclosed European Country

Brazilian Marcelo Freixo, a high-profile state assemblyman in Rio de Janeiro, who investigated criminal ...

Drug patent

Group Asks US Congress to Punish Brazil and Thai Drug Piracy

An American group called USA For Innovation released an open letter to Members of ...

When the People Take Over in Brazil

Avenida Paulista, a three-kilometer long avenue, is regarded as São Paulo’s best-known landmark. Why ...

POR AÍ

Judith Kay is fascinated with Brazil and its music. After falling in love with ...

US Interference in Brazil and Latin America’s Elections to Be Monitored by Canadian Group

A network of academics and activists, assembled by a civil society organization based in ...

Whew, Theft of Classified Data in Brazil Was Just an Inside Job!

Petrobras publicly announced two weeks ago (February 14) that it got burglarized. Brazil’s state-controlled giant ...

35 Indians Prosecuted in Brazil for Invading and Destroying Properties

Thirty-five leaders of the Xukuru people are being prosecuted for having reacted to the ...

Folly

To wage a war on terrorism is an absurd idea. The USA Patriot Act ...

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 ...