Brazil Clamps Down on Paraguayan Contraband

Businessmen, taxi and truck drivers in Ciudad del Este blocked this week the Friendship Bridge that links the Paraguayan city with Brazil’s Foz de Iguazu in protest over strict customs controls on the Brazilian side.

Paraguayan radio stations reported that the bridge over the Parana River was blocked on the Paraguayan side around noon by taxis, trucks and other vehicles stranding thousands of shoppers on both sides of the international border.

Demonstrators only opened the blockade for a few minutes in the afternoon to allow an estimated 3.000 people cross back over to Brazil.

The blocking of the bridge came in response to the tightening of Brazilian controls on the transport of goods from Ciudad del Este, which is Paraguay’s main trade center.

According to the Paraguayan Import Center, some 50,000 small Brazilian shoppers cross the bridge every week to buy products in Ciudad del Este, mostly computers, electronic devices, perfumes, liquor and other imported items which are extremely expensive in Brazil.

Brazilian authorities claim the bridge is one of the main spots for introducing counterfeit and smuggled goods, including weapons and drugs, all of which are sold in large cities like São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, where police battling crime have had to face sophisticated weapons including rockets and bazookas.

Brazilian customs announced Monday that starting Tuesday they would confiscate any vehicle crossing from Ciudad del Este found carrying imported non declared merchandise. Only vehicles belonging to authorized companies engaged in international transport of merchandise would be allowed.

The decision affects an estimated a thousand taxis and vans, as well as 400 motorcycle drivers who regularly cross to Brazil delivering goods on request from Brazilian shoppers.

Ciudad del Este business association and local authorities were planning to meet with Paraguayan President Nicanor Duarte to inform him of the situation.

Mercopress – www.mercopress.com

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Indian Chief Raoni Tells Lula: ‘We Want No Invader on Our Land’

Kayapó Indian leader Raoni has delivered a letter to Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula ...

UN Borrows Inclusion Programs from Brazil

Brazil’s social inclusion programs in the area of sports – Gaining (“Painting”) Freedom and ...

In Brazil, Maternal Mortality Still 74 for 100,000 Births

The high rate of maternal mortality in Brazil is of concern to the World ...

Brazil’s Benefit of Costlier Oil: More Sales to Arabs

The price of the WTI (West Texas Intermediate crude, a type of oil used ...

One-actor mania

Why Brazilian theater has become in many instances a one-actor show? Several plays being ...

Winner at Sundance, Brazilian Documentary Starts Promising US Career

Manda Bala (Send a Bullet), the Brazilian movie that won at this year's Sundance ...

Don’t Let Your Guard Down, Experts Warn

Advertorial H1N1 virus has no cure, but there is a way to prevent it ...

Are we hiding our black heritage?

Brazilians should be teaching the world and the US in particular the way to ...

Brazil Among World’s Ten Largest Cement Producers

Brazil should produce around one million tons more of cement this year. Last year, ...

Brazil’s Challenge Is to Grow, Says Minister

Evaluating the two years of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s administration, Minister Luiz ...

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