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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 07:39 AM
Original message
Mexico City Police Free 107 'Slave Workers'
Source: Associated Press

Mexico City Police Free 107 'Slave Workers'
Posted: 10:57 pm EST December 3, 2009
Updated: 6:54 am EST December 4, 2009

MEXICO CITY -- Mexico City police on Thursday freed 107 people who were forced to work under slave-like conditions in a clandestine factory making shopping bags and clothing clasps, authorities said.

Police raided the factory, which was hidden inside an alcohol and drug rehabilitation center, after a worker escaped and informed authorities, Mexico City Attorney General Miguel Angel Mancera said. Twenty three people were arrested for human trafficking.

"The victims were being exploited and some were sexually abused," Mancera said. Many were suffering from dehydration and malnutrition, and some had cuts and broken bones.

Most were from indigenous communities and didn't speak Spanish. They were abducted or lured from communities across Mexico and taken to the St. Thomas-The Chosen by God rehabilitation center, Mancera said.

The freed workers, whose ages ranged from 14 to 70, were forced to work for 16 hours a day, with just a 30-minute break. Mancera said they were fed chicken feet and rotten vegetables.

Read more: http://www.wsoctv.com/news/21803880/detail.html
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a la izquierda Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 08:07 AM
Response to Original message
1. My blood is BOILING!
This is why I wonder, daily, if a career in academia is going to be as useful to indigenous peoples as a career in the private sector or non-profit. I am so angry.
Thanks for posting. I'm going to read the article and share with my students this morning. We're talking about Brazilian indigenous peoples in the 20th century, but this is still apt.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 08:48 AM
Response to Reply #1
4. Images of people used as slaves in Brazil:
http://www.photobrazil.com/#/Stories/Modern Slavery/1
http://www.photographersdirect.com/stockimages/m/modern_slavery.asp

~~~~~

Posted on Sun, Sep. 05, 2004

Slavery exists out of sight in Brazil
By Kevin G. Hall
Knight Ridder Newspapers


MARABA, Brazil - Jose Silva came to the Macauba Ranch in Brazil's eastern Amazon hoping to earn a few hundred dollars clearing jungle.

Two years later, he was $800 in debt and terrified that if he tried to leave the ranch, Gilmar the field boss would pull out his .38 revolver and kill him.

"I would cry alone at night in my hammock and ask God to help me escape. I felt like a slave," he told Knight Ridder.

Silva was a modern slave, working with 46 other men and a boy to clear jungle with machetes, chain saws and tractors from sunup to sundown in the tropical heat, seven days a week, for no money. He and the others got one meal a day of rice, beans and a little chicken or beef, which they were made to eat standing up to discourage resting. There were no toilets or latrines at the workers' camp, only bushes.

Rat feces flecked the sacks of rice in the camp's storehouse. Flies covered raw meat hung on clotheslines in the tropical heat. Workers got no medical attention, even though one of them shivered with malaria, a disease spread by the Amazon's ubiquitous mosquitoes. Brazil abolished slavery in 1888. Earlier this year, however, the government acknowledged to the United Nations that at least 25,000 Brazilians work under "conditions analogous to slavery." The top anti-slavery official in Brasilia, the capital, puts the number of modern slaves at 50,000.

The fruits of Brazil's slave labor end up in the United States in the form of imported hardwoods, pig iron and processed meats. Other products, such as soybeans produced on farms cleared by enslaved workers, compete with U.S. products in world markets.

"Silva" isn't the ranch worker's real name. When a Knight Ridder reporter encountered him, he was an informant leading Brazilian labor department investigators, accompanied by heavily armed federal police, back to the Macauba Ranch. He may be called as a witness in court cases, and labor officials insisted that he not be identified for fear of reprisal.

While landowners don't own Brazil's modern slaves, the workers toil at gunpoint and the threat of violence, hidden by the vast Amazon jungle and, in many cases, beyond the reach of the law.

Most are unschooled men from Brazil's northern states, where their families live in tiny dirt-floored homes without running water. Their infants squabble with cats and dogs and pigs over food.

Recruiters who promise land-clearing jobs that pay $3 to $4 a day find it easy to lure these men hundreds of miles southeast to clear land at the edge of the Amazon jungle.

"Our situation obligates us to travel," said Jose Egito dos Santos, 43, a father of four once lured into slavery. He's a subsistence farmer in the northern state of Piaui, where he considers himself lucky to make $20 a month.

Slavery persists in Brazil - alone among South American countries - for a simple reason and a complicated one. The simple reason is that slaves are out of sight and out of mind: Brazilians in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, who dominate the national political culture, are no more likely to worry about rural slaves in the Amazon than New Yorkers are to worry about illegal immigrants in the Rio Grande Valley.

The eastern Amazon region, where most Brazilian slavery occurs, is remote, and its ranchers feel few restraints in how they treat their workers.

"Landowners believe it is the most normal thing in the world to deny someone their liberty and even their life," said Marinalva Cardoso, leader of a government anti-slavery team.

By law, enslaving a worker can bring a landowner two to eight years in prison in addition to fines. However, the fines are so low - less than $110 per offense - that they're at worst a small cost of doing business. And no one has ever been imprisoned for it.

The complicated reason is that Brazil's modern slaves are cogs in the global economy. Their labor makes Brazil's exports of beef, soybeans, timber and pig iron cheaper, often much cheaper than competing U.S. products.

On the Macauba Ranch, where Silva worked, some slaves cleared jungle with machetes to make tropical hardwoods accessible to loggers, pastureland for cattle and farmland for soybeans. They also did the logging and manned clay ovens that turned wood from the cleared land into charcoal that's used to make pig iron.

Brazil is the leading exporter of cooked and processed meats to the United States. Beef from cattle raised on land cleared by slave labor can end up in products such as Con Agra's Mary Kitchen corned beef. Typically, commodities produced with slave labor in Brazil get mixed in with commodities produced by its legal workers. By the time they reach the United States, it's almost impossible to determine whether a shipment is contaminated. U.S. companies, do, however, import products from areas of Brazil where slavery is widespread.

Brazilian tropical hardwoods such as cumaru, ipe and jatoba, some of it harvested or made accessible to loggers by enslaved workers, are widely sold as exotic flooring and decking. In U.S. stores such as Home Depot's Expo Design Centers, such woods are sold under names such as Brazilian cherry, Brazilian teak and Brazilian walnut.

Cleared wood that has no commercial value ends up in charcoal ovens, which are often tended by slaves or by what Brazil terms "degrading" labor: workers considered slightly less abused because they're not held against their will. Degraded workers in the Amazon number in the hundreds of thousands, or by some estimates a million or more. No one in official Brazil has a precise number for them or for slaves.

Blast furnaces in the eastern Amazon combine the charcoal that they produce with rich local iron ore to make pig iron, which is to finished iron and steel products what baking chocolate is to chocolate cake and fudge.

U.S. companies imported virtually all the 2.2 million tons of pig iron that northern Brazil produced last year. One of the biggest buyers was Nucor Corp. of Charlotte, N.C., America's leading steel-maker, whose products end up in everything from cars to steel beams. Executives of U.S. companies contacted by Knight Ridder said they were unaware of links between Brazilian slavery and their products, had language in their contracts with suppliers to assure that what they bought wasn't slave-tainted, or didn't consider the problem significant.

More:
http://www.mongabay.com/external/slavery_in_brazil.htm

It's an enormous subject. Best wishes with it.
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cowcommander Donating Member (679 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 08:19 AM
Response to Original message
2. Sadly a common story in Mexico
There was a news report a few months ago about the poor being tricked into believing that they will be smuggled into the U.S for jobs, but instead they just dump them off in a farm inside Mexico where they're held in slave-like conditions.
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Soylent Brice Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 08:27 AM
Response to Original message
3. K&R
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FreakinDJ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 08:52 AM
Response to Original message
5. And we need WTO because ....
Were Fucking Ignorant Assholes who allow Multinational Corporations set up slave labor camps around the world, destroy the country we live in, and suppress the lives of Billions
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 09:46 AM
Response to Original message
6. Mexico City police free dozens of "slave workers"
Mexico City police free dozens of "slave workers"
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican police freed 107 people on Thursday who were imprisoned and forced to work in a clandestine factory in the capital, the prosecutor's office said.

Police raided the factory, which made clothing clasps, after several months of investigation following the complaint of a worker who had escaped from the facility.

Twenty-three people were arrested.

Mexican media reported the freed workers were suffering from malnutrition and showed signs of physical abuse.

Most were indigenous people from the south of the country and drug and alcohol addicts rounded up from Mexico City's streets, a spokeswoman for the city prosecutor's office said.

Some were lured into the factory with the promise of jobs. Investigators were also probing allegations that police officers helped round up some of those held in the factory during routine street patrols, Mexican media reported.

Mexicans trying to migrate to the United States are being increasingly targeted by Mexico's ruthless organized crime groups that have expanded into kidnapping and extortion in recent years.

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE5B305620091204
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Brickbat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 09:50 AM
Response to Original message
7. Shopping bags, eh? This is why I read the label every time. What good does a reuseable shopping
bag do for anyone if it's made in a country with crap labor and environmental standards?
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madmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 11:03 AM
Response to Reply #7
10. I make my own, quite easy.
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Brickbat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 11:09 AM
Response to Reply #10
12. Right on!
I buy mine from a local company, and I use them for everything, not just shopping:

http://battlelakeoutdoors.com/shop/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=191

They're huge-ass, sturdy, washable, and I LOVE them.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 06:28 PM
Response to Reply #12
15. Thanks for the link, and the recommendation. n/t
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Brickbat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 07:03 PM
Response to Reply #15
18. You're welcome! They're backpacks are outstanding, as well. They cost about as much as
Land's End backpacks, are actually made in the USA, and are incredibly durable. We bought some for the kids three years ago and they look brand new.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 10:03 AM
Response to Original message
8. Here's a short news video on these rescued men.
http://www.euronews.net/2009/12/04/mexico-city-police-free-dozens-of-slave-workers/

It says at the end that they believe Mexico City policemen were also involved in the slavery ring.
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Blue_Tires Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 10:29 AM
Response to Reply #8
9. yeah, i'm pretty sure there was collaboration from corrupt cops and officials
you don't just set up shop inside a drug rehab without someone noticing, i think....
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athenasatanjesus Donating Member (592 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 11:08 AM
Response to Original message
11. We should stop our war on drugs
Then Mexico's law enforcement would have less problems to deal with,and they could focus more on these issues.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 06:35 PM
Response to Reply #11
16. This country used to use the "commie threat" to get completely involved
in Latin American governments, create coups, install puppet dictators, etc., always seeking to kill off any people who didn't support total exploitation of their natural resources and cheap labor. At some point the "commie" cover became replaced by the "War on Drugs" scam, and the same meddling in Latin America continued under a different banner.

Damned shame. So many, MANY people have been forced to live in desperate deprivation, have been tortured, murdered, and their loved ones left to grieve because of this.
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Omaha Steve Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 11:10 AM
Response to Original message
13. K & +R!
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Trillo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 11:39 AM
Response to Original message
14. "St. Thomas-The Chosen by God rehabilitation center" Is that a Roman Catholic
affiliated or owned center? "St. Thomas"
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-04-09 06:54 PM
Response to Original message
17. Rehab Center Forced Mexicans Into Slave Labor
Rehab Center Forced Mexicans Into Slave Labor
by The Associated Press

MEXICO CITY December 4, 2009, 05:04 pm ET

Kidnap victims freed from a rehab center in Mexico City said they were snatched from the streets and held in slave-like conditions — beaten, robbed and forced to work 16 hours a day making shopping bags and clothes pins.

Some of the 107 victims said Friday they were forbidden from talking for as long as a week at a time by guards they called the "godfathers" of the Chosen of God center, and were never compensated for months of labor.

"They didn't pay us a single peso," said Efrain Torres, 36, a cargo loader at a produce market who claimed he was hustled into a van at midnight months ago by the center's employees. Torres told MVS Radio the work schedule was 16 hours per day, and "anyone who wouldn't work ... they punished us by making us stand upright in the bathroom for three days."

The Mexico City Attorney General's Office said 23 suspects have been detained for allegedly acting as guards and overseers at the three-story building with barred doors and windows, located in a poor neighborhood on the city's eastern edge. A sign covering much of the exterior wall describes it as an "Institute for Rehabilitation of Alcoholism and Drug Addiction."

The gang that ran the "Chosen of God" rehabilitation center apparently targeted the homeless and other apparently vulnerable people on the streets.

Human rights activists claim city government officials knew about the kidnappings since at least June, and may have tolerated the practice as a way of cleaning vagrants off the streets.

"It is not just this center. This was part of a series of actions known as 'social cleansing,' with the clear aim of making the city look more clean, pretty, tourist-friendly," said Clara Becerra, a social worker for the rights group El Caracol, which filed a complaint with the city human rights commission after street people complained of being forced into vans in June.

More:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=121078093
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