Brazil Again Finds and Releases Hundreds of Slave Laborers

Agriculture is one of the areas in which slave labor is more common in Brazil From the beginning of the year till the end of March, 583 Brazilians who were working as slaves were released by the Brazilian government's Mobile Inspection Group from the Labor and Employment Ministry. Last year, during the same period, the number of slave workers was smaller: 565 people.

The new number was announced this Tuesday, April 10, by the Labor Ministry's communication office. In the first quarter, the Mobile Group guaranteed the payment of close to 918,000 reais (about half a million dollars) in labor indemnities. The government held 17 operations in 40 farms.

Last year, during the same period, 51 farms were visited in 21 operations, which brought almost 763,000 reais (US$ 377,000 reais) in compensations.

Pará, in the North, was the state with the largest number of released workers, 192. It was followed by Piauí­ (155), Bahia (97), Maranhão (78), Goiás (36) and Mato Grosso (25).

The activities with more employees exploited as slaves are cattle breeding, agriculture, and wood, coal and vegetable exploration.

Among those who participated in the Mobile Group there were labor inspectors, Federal Police chiefs and agents, and prosecutors from the Labor Public Ministry.

At the time of their rescue, workers receive the money they are owed plus unemployment insurance, food, housing and transportation to their hometowns. They also receive legal assistance and are included in federal social programs.

Exports

Brazil exported over US$ 11.7 billion in agricultural products between January and March this year. The value is 20% greater than exports in the same period of 2006, when the country sold abroad a total of US$ 9.795 billion.

Imports also grew in the first quarter of 2007: they were 33% greater than in the first quarter of last year, when they totaled US$ 2.012 billion.

The sectors that contributed the most to the growth in exports, according to figures supplied by the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply, were meats, sugar and alcohol, coffee and fruit juice.

The ministry also pointed out the increase in exports to the Middle East, the European Union (EU) and Africa, respectively 79.2%, 23.5% and 20.6% in March this year when compared to the same month in 2006.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Preeminent Baroque Sculptor Was a Fingerless Genius

When you think of baroque, you probably remember the curvy, exaggerated, passionate form of ...

Ahmadinejad’s Visit to Brazil: Congress Divided, New Protests Planned

Brazilian president's special adviser for International Affairs, Marco Aurélio Garcia, told reporters this Tuesday, ...

Cargo train in Itu, interior of São Paulo, Brazil

Brazil Is Back on Track

Railway transport is considered the ideal means for great distances and for cargo in ...

Deluge Stops Rio and Kills at Least 94

In Rio, the rain started in the late afternoon Monday and has fallen intermittently ...

Brazil’s Lula Received Money from Gadafi. If Proved Impeachment Is Certain.

By law, the Brazilian political party that receives foreign resources will have its registration ...

Brazilian president Lula dips hand in oil at Petrobras

New Plan to Make Brazil Grow Will Only Help Those Already Grown

Brazil’s just-announced Growth Acceleration Program is a plan for the elites, aiming at their ...

A Morte e a Morte de Quincas Berro Dágua

Jorge Amado By Jorge Amado Jorge Amado, who died August 6, 2001, four days ...

Journalist Executed in Brazil with 8 Shots to the Head

International pro-free-press organization Reporters Without Borders voiced dismay on learning that freelance photographer Robson ...

Brazil Air Tragedy: US Pilots Talk. Where Were the Controllers, They Ask

More than two months and a half after Brazil’s deadliest air accident ever and ...

Small Oil Company from Brazil Looks Overseas for Business

Representatives of the RedePetro Bahia recently participated in two international missions with the objective ...