U.S. Coast Guard to Check Brazil’s Ports for Security

As part of new security measures implanted by the International Maritime Organization (which has 160-nation members) since 9/11, a US Coast Guard delegation will be in Brazil to check on ports and their compliance with the International Code of Shipping and Port Security (known as the ISPS Code).

The delegation is verifying if the ISPS is being implanted in countries with trade relations with the US. In Brazil it will visit Fortaleza, Rio de Janeiro and Santos.


João Carlos de Campos, the Brazilian head of Conportos (Comissão Nacional de Segurança nos Portos, Terminais e Vias Navegáveis), the equivalent of the Coast Guard, reports that originally the ISPS was supposed to be implanted by July 2004, but as it was a complex process that deadline was not viable .


The delegation now visiting Brazil will share experience and knowledge with Brazilian authorities that will ease implantation. Campos points out that the new security measures will increase the cost of exported cargo.


ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Another Brazilian Minister Bites the Dust Accused of Corruption

The wave of corruption shell shocking the Brazilian government reached Communications Minister Luiz Gushiken ...

A Danger in Brazil: Splitting into Two Races

Hidden behind accounts in the press and the government’s Diário Oficial, the real Brazil ...

Why Can’t Brazil Stand Up to Bush?

Brazil’s so-called Shoot Down Law was approved seven years ago by the Brazilian Congress, ...

In Brazil Only 51% of Cities Have Sewers and a Mere 15% Treat Sewage

To fulfill the Goals of the Millennium, the group of norms approved by the ...

11.4 Million Families in Brazil Make Less than US$ 36 a Month

The Brazilian government and the institutions that oversee federal spending formalized a partnership, January ...

Brazilian Design Gets a Place on Brazil’s Postal Stamps

The design of national products has already won the foreign market, international awards and ...

Brazil’s Gun Referendum Exposes Country’s Open Wound of Violence

The legalization or ban of guns and ammunition trade is the putative matter to ...

Social Movements in Brazil Unite for the Right of Protesting

Representatives from social movements in Brazil have condemned the charges against 23 activists of ...

Uruguay Leader Sees Dirty Tricks from Brazil and Argentina in Mercosur

For Uruguay's ruling coalition presidential candidate José Mujica, Mercosur is "lame and in misery," ...

Good Job News Not Enough to Cheer Brazilian Markets

Brazilian shares mostly declined, as global crude oil prices closed above US$ 55 a ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`