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Brazil Hatches Primer on Risks of Being Recruited into Slave Labor PDF Print E-mail
Written by Milena Assis   
Thursday, 29 June 2006

Showing Brazilian workers the risks of being recruited to perform slave labor is the aim of the manual Escravo, Nem Pensar! (Slave, No Way!), produced by Brazil's Ministry of Education (MEC) in partnership with the International Labor Organization (ILO) and the non-governmental organization Repórter Brasil.

Distribution of the manual began last week. The first recipients were 36,000 youth and adult literacy instructors in Bahia, Tocantins, Maranhão, Pará, Mato Grosso, and Piauí, states with high indices of slave labor.

The pedagogical coordinator of Youth and Adult Education in the Secretariat of Ongoing Education, Literacy Instruction, and Diversity (SECAD/MEC), Maria Margarida Machado, informed that the purpose of the manual is to help form citizenship among students engaged in the process of becoming literate.

"There are still 25,000 people submitted to slave labor, and literacy instructors can help us with this problem," she said.

She emphasized that, even though the manual will not resolve the problem of access to the labor market in Brazil, it represents one more element in the campaign against illegal forms of labor.

"It is an attempt to expand access to jobs and seek alternatives, such as the organization of a solidary economy. Workers need to adopt a different perspective, since we are talking about a population that is initiating literacy training, so discussing insertion is practically impossible."

Agência Brasil

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Comments (2)Add Comment
Quite stupid !!!!!
written by Guest, June 29, 2006
What is the need of manuals for illiterate poors ??????

Or will the literacy instructors go to where the slaves are ?

That would mean that the government KNOWS where they are BUT DOES NOTHING to free them !!!

Finally the estimates of 25000 slaves is the government estimates, knowing perfectly that far far more than that is the truth.
They just minimize, ON PURPOSE, the real number !

Brazil would never care so much for a group of 25000 people in difficulty.

Mutiplying by a minimum of ten times....would be more accurate !
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written by Guest, June 29, 2006
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