Brazilian authorities rescued more than 4,500 slaves from captivity last year, carrying out a record number of raids on remote ranches and plantations, figures released this week by the country’s work ministry showed.
The government said its anti-slavery task force, a roaming unit designed to crack down on modern-day slavery, freed 4,634 workers from slave-like conditions last year. The task force, which often works with armed members of the federal police, said it undertook 133 missions and visited 255 different farms last year. The ministry said former slaves had been paid US$3.5 million in compensation.
Brazil officially abolished slavery in 1888, but activists believe thousands of impoverished Brazilians are still being lured into debt slavery.
Leonardo Sakamoto, head of a Sao Paulo-based NGO, said slavery remained a big problem despite growing attempts to eradicate it by the government of Brazilian President Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva.
“It is a very sad situation that leaves you feeling impotent. The federal government has acted — but having slave labor in a country where the wealth is so evident is a very painful contradiction,” said Sakamoto, who is a member of Brazil’s National Commission for the Eradication of Slave Labor and runs the NGO Reporter Brasil.
Many of Brazil’s slave workers come from the impoverished backlands of northeastern Brazil, where unemployment is high. Rounded up by middlemen who promise them employment, the workers are packed on to coaches and taken to remote farms, often in the Amazon or Brazil’s midwest.
Once there, the slaves are put to work producing charcoal, cutting sugar cane or clearing tracts of Amazon rainforest for cattle ranchers. Housed in isolated and often squalid jungle camps, they are forced to work until they have paid off debts for food, medicine and housing. Many lose contact with their families.
Activists claim that ranchers in the Amazon often employ small armies of gunmen to stop workers fleeing.
During a visit to Sao Felix do Xingu, a remote Amazon settlement notorious for illegal deforestation and slave labor, the Guardian met members of the CPT, a Catholic land commission, which often tips off the anti-slavery task force.
Maria Nizan de Souza, a CPT representative, said it was common to hear stories of workers being murdered after demanding payment from their employers. She said one rural worker had told her he had seen the body of a colleague floating in a river, bound to a tractor tire, after he had tried to flee.
Sakamoto said that while the government offered financial benefits to those rescued from slavery, more initiatives to counter poverty and unemployment in the northeast of the country were needed to prevent people from becoming slaves in the first place.
When Shanghai-based designer Guo Qingshan posted a vacation photo on Valentine’s Day and captioned it “Puppy Mountain,” it became a sensation in China and even created a tourist destination. Guo had gone on a hike while visiting his hometown of Yichang in central China’s Hubei Province late last month. When reviewing the photographs, he saw something he had not noticed before: A mountain shaped like a dog’s head rested on the ground next to the Yangtze River, its snout perched at the water’s edge. “It was so magical and cute. I was so excited and happy when I discovered it,” Guo said.
Chinese authorities said they began live-fire exercises in the Gulf of Tonkin on Monday, only days after Vietnam announced a new line marking what it considers its territory in the body of water between the nations. The Chinese Maritime Safety Administration said the exercises would be focused on the Beibu Gulf area, closer to the Chinese side of the Gulf of Tonkin, and would run until tomorrow evening. It gave no further details, but the drills follow an announcement last week by Vietnam establishing a baseline used to calculate the width of its territorial waters in the Gulf of Tonkin. State-run Vietnam News
Four decades after they were forced apart, US-raised Adamary Garcia and her birth mother on Saturday fell into each other’s arms at the airport in Santiago, Chile. Without speaking, they embraced tearfully: A rare reunification for one the thousands of Chileans taken from their mothers as babies and given up for adoption abroad. “The worst is over,” Edita Bizama, 64, said as she beheld her daughter for the first time since her birth 41 years ago. Garcia had flown to Santiago with four other women born in Chile and adopted in the US. Reports have estimated there were 20,000 such cases from 1950 to
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