In Brazil You Have Degrading Labor and Then, Way Down, Slavery

Most of the victims of slave labor in Brazil are illiterate males, according to Marcelo Campos, adviser in the Brazilian Ministry of Labor and Employment’s Department of Work Inspection.

These men work mostly cutting down forests, preparing forests and fields to plant forage grass, and tending livestock. Last year Pará was the state with the largest number of workers freed by the Ministry’s Special Mobile Inspection Group: 1,128 altogether.

Campos observes that the definitions of slave labor and degrading labor conditions are frequently confused. "Slave labor is when workers are prevented from leaving their jobs. They can’t tell their boss they won’t be back to work the next day. If they do, they will be beaten, and their lives may even be threatened," he informs.

Under degrading labor conditions, according to Campos, individuals are free to break their contracts. "They are deprived of all their workers’ rights, as in the case of slave labor, but, in effect, if they so desire, they are not obliged to return to work the following day," he explains.

According to Campos, workers subjected to slave labor conditions are inveigled by promises of employment and a better life. They are recruited by landowners or go-betweens.

"They [the recruiters] go to where there are workers available, most of the time in other states, and they hold out false promises of good wages, good housing, and good working conditions. They delude them. They take these workers to the farms, maybe even advancing them some money," he warns.

"When they get there, the workers realize that nothing they were promised was true. And they are blocked when they try to leave."

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Dom Casmurro

Seeing my distress and finding out why, a palm tree murmured that there was ...

After All-Time High, Brazilian Market Tumbles

Brazilian and Latin American bourses fell on profit taking this Friday. In the U.S., ...

Brazil Seeks International Pacts to Fight Corruption

By the end of 2006, the Brazilian government intends to negotiate and sign judicial ...

Brazilians Want to Know How Lula’s Son Went from Jobless to Millionaire in 4 Years

An investigation has been launched into the fortune of one of the Brazilian president’s ...

Por aí

From the masters  Angolan Mestre Benedito taught Mestre Pastinha who taught Mestre João Grande ...

For Brazil Olympics Will Be a Brief Distraction. The Crooks Will Never Leave

Yes, ladies and gentlemen, the great Gods of International Sport have deemed Rio de ...

Brazil: Trying to Save the Forests

The conservation and recuperation of the remnants of araucária forests in the South of ...

Brazil: 19 Years Later 3 Men Accused of Murdering Missionary Stand Trial

Nineteen years after the murder of Vicente Cañas Costa, a Jesuit missionary who lived ...

In Brazil, Police Go After Corrupts While Congress Can’t Make Up Its Mind

An important event took place in Brazil this past Wednesday, July 9. The CCJ, ...

Brazil Won’t Sit Around Waiting for Crisis, Says President Lula

After reviewing the year 2008, Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva stated that ...

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