Brazil's Ministry of Justice ordered the impounding of genetically modified products that don't carry this information on the label. Since April, 2003, all food products or ingredients intended for human or animal consumption in Brazil that contain more than 1 percent of transgenic components are required to convey this information to consumers on the label.
On August 25, Consumer Protection agencies from nine Brazilian states conducted an inspection of supermarkets and gathered samples of 45 different types of soybean-derived products.
If they discover any product containing a greater percentage of transgenic components than what the law permits without this information's appearing on the label, the company can be required to answer an administrative process and is liable to a fine.
The products that were collected will be tested in specialized laboratories in Brasília. The result should be available in 30 days.
"The idea is to analyze these 45 types of products in the initial phase and then verify other types of products, not for the companies to stop using them, but so that they label their products in order for consumers to be informed," affirmed Daniel Goldberg, Secretary of Economic Rights in the Ministry of Justice.
Earlier this year, Greenpeace protesters closed the entrance to the port of Paranaguá, in the southern state of Paraná in order to halt the unloading of a ship from Argentina carrying 30,000 tons of genetically-modified (GM) soybeans.
They blocked the port with their ship, the "Artic Sunrise." According to spokesmen for the protesters, the objective was to ensure that non-GM soybeans did not get contaminated by the GM soybeans.
Greenpeace is calling its protest activities "A Better Brazil Without GM Crops." Gabriela Vuolo, a scientist with Greenpeace, says that Brazil could lose its economic advantage as the world's biggest exporter of non-GM soybeans if steps are not taken to prevent contamination.
The only good thing to say about the visit to Brazil of Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, on Monday November 23, is that it was mercifully short and lasted less than 24 hours. Ahmadinejad had his picture taken being hugged by president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva who gave him a warm welcome and said Iran had every right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.
The small, coastal town of Condé is located just a twenty minute's drive from João Pessoa, the capital of Paraíba. The Northeast of Brazil has historically been a place of encounter and mixing between peoples. For millenia groups of indigenous people fished, farmed, migrated and sometimes fought along this large, fertile area.
The Brazilian diplo-MÁ-cia (bad diplomacy) carries on its accelerated course towards the non-acknowledgment of human rights, although sometimes it takes pleasure in saying that it does precisely the opposite. The visit of Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is another example of a diplomatic omission that verges on hypocrisy.
On July 4, 2006, representatives of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay met in Caracas to sign the protocol for the entrance of Venezuela into the Southern Common Market (Mercosur). After two and a half years, the protocol was approved by the legislative bodies of Argentina and Uruguay, and as of now it may be only days away from being ratified by the continent's economic megalith, Brazil.
Some sectors of the fight against AIDS have suggested that Thabo Mbeki, the former president of South Africa, committed genocide through his absence from the fight against the illness in his country throughout his two terms.
One hundred and eleven years after Brazil abolished slavery, the number of workers deprived of their freedom is still huge. They raise cattle, produce charcoal, sugar cane or timber. Some of them, most undocumented Bolivians, work in basements of small apparel factories in São Paulo and other metropolis.
On November 7, 2009 a few friends and I had an opportunity to take a look inside a Brazilian jail outside the city of Rio de Janeiro. We were able to take some amateur footage of our experience on video (see link below). It's no surprise, of course, that the typical Brazilian jail lacks some of the functionality of those in North America or Europe, but our experience that day was quite shocking.
Depletion of the Amazon Rainforest is not a new concern facing environmentalists, biologists, ecologists, and a growing number of the Amazonian indigenous peoples. For decades they have feared for the fate of the world's most biologically diverse and species-rich hothouse.
Geisy Arruda made history this week in Brazil, but for all the wrong reasons. What began as a poorly planned fashion statement has become a worldwide tale. Geisy decided to wear a pink mini-dress to her private college in São Paulo state, and after that, all hell broke loose.
The push of vigilante groups in Rio de Janeiro's favelas (shantytowns) in the last three years is the most important and alarming information of the just-released study by the Rio de Janeiro University's Violence Research Center (Nupev-Uerj).