World Should Ban Goods Made in Brazil by Slave Labor

The international market needs to adopt an instrument of selective trade restrictions on Brazilian products as a way to combat the use of slave labor.

This measure is defended by the Brazilian political scientist, Leonardo Sakamoto, who is a member of the National Commission for the Eradication of slave Labor in Brazil (CONATRAE).

At the end of last month, he presented this proposal to the German government and entrepreneurs. Sakamoto was invited to expatiate on this theme before a parliamentary commission in Berlin. It was there that he called for a selective trade ban.

"The same way the whole world checks sources to see whether a product is contaminated by hoof and mouth disease, the idea is for them to check on the use of slave labor, too," Sakamoto explained in an interview.

The political scientist recommended that foreign businessmen who buy raw materials from Brazil first check the list of farms and ranches where workers subjected to slave working conditions have been found. This is the so-called black list, available on the Ministry of Labor’s website.

According to Sakamoto, for purchasers of manufactured items, the guideline is to demand that, on their invoices, their suppliers provide information on the sources of their raw materials. This will make it possible to determine whether a product originated on a farm or ranch where slave labor is employed.

A study conducted in 2004 by the non-governmental organization, Brazil Reporter, at the request of the Special Secretariat of Human Rights, traced the destination of products from farms and ranches on the blacklist and discovered that part of this production was destined for export.

"We identified over 200 Brazilian and transnational companies that made use of slave labor or did business with companies that made use of slave labor," Sakamoto affirmed.

The survey found slave labor present in cattle-ranching (beef and viscera), soybeans (beans, oil, and feed), sugarcane (fuel alcohol and sugarcane liquor), coffee, cotton, black pepper, and charcoal for steel-making.

Even though they were not part of the study, other supply chains, such as tomatoes, fruits, and wood, also evidence the problem. Since the study was based only on the blacklist, these areas were omitted.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Madeira River in the Brazilian Amazon

Brazil’s Pharaonic Project for the Amazon Threatens Humans and Nature

In recent weeks, the Brazilian government has turned to the difficult task of building ...

UN Environment Effort to Involve 10 Million Brazilians

The preparation for Brazil’s II National Youth Conference on Environment starts next June 5th, ...

How and Where to Vote

All the US Brazilian consulates phones and addressesBy Brazilian expatriates may vote at the ...

Brazil Defends GMOs at UN and Bars Tougher Rules on Biosafety

Key United Nations negotiations on the safe trade of genetically modified (GM) crops and ...

Now Is the Opposition’s Turn to Get Involved in a Corruption Scandal in Brazil

After the mensalão (big monthly allowance) case rocked Brazil’s ruling party, the Workers Party ...

Syrian President Compares Obama to Lula and Says Brazilian Leader Gets Results

Wrapping up his  Latin American tour of four countries, Brazil, Cuba, Venezuela and Argentina, ...

You Can’t Have Peace With One Billion Hungry People, Brazil’s Lula Tells UN

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva addressed the third meeting of the United ...

Brazil’s Paper and Pulp Maker Aracruz Grows with Asia Help

Aracruz Celulose began a plan for modernization of their unit in the city of ...

Brazil’s TAM Gets First of Eight Boeings 777

Brazilian leading airline TAM has just received from the manufacturing plant in Seattle, USA, ...

Despite US$ 1.5 Billion Surplus Brazil Blames China for Unfair Competition

Trade between Brazil and China jumped a lot between 2000 and 2005, from US$ ...