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Diplomacy & Crisis News

Germany Says ‘Nein’ to Sex With Animals

Foreign Policy - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 21:47
Two unnamed complainants asked a German court to reverse a ban on animal sex. The court threw out the claim.

Marco Rubio Sounds a Lot Like Hillary Clinton on Apple and Encryption

Foreign Policy - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 21:13
A court order compelling Apple to help the FBI unlock one of its phones has sparked a heated debate over privacy and national security.

5 Myths About China’s Missile Deployment on Woody Island

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 21:04
The United States' criticisms of China in the South China Sea are misleading -- likely intentionally so.

Meet the Obscure Kurdish Fighters Taking Responsibility for the Ankara Bombing

Foreign Policy - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 20:44
These obscure Kurdish fighters just took responsibility for the this week's Ankara bombing.

France’s John Kasich Is Winning

Foreign Policy - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 20:38
Once dismissed as an out-of-touch technocrat, Alain Juppé has reinvented himself as France's voice of moderation — and the French love him for it.

Xi Wants Chinese Media to Be ‘Publicity Fronts’ for the CCP

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 20:30
Xi Jinping continues to emphasize the need for Party control of Chinese media -- a worrying sign for journalists.

With No Explanation for Arrest, Turkey Frees Journalist Documenting Syria’s Horrors

Foreign Policy - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 20:05
Turkish authorities have released Rami Jarrah, a Syrian journalist based in Gaziantep, but have not yet provided a reason for his arrest.

The Problem With John Kerry’s Trip to Hollywood

Foreign Policy - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 20:01
Wrong movie, wrong focus group, wrong century.

Afghanistan recommits to ending recruitment of children in security forces – UN envoy

UN News Centre - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 19:54
Following a mission to Afghanistan, the United Nations envoy dealing with children and armed conflict issues, has welcomed the Government's recommitment to fully implementing its plan to end and prevent the recruitment and use of children in the national security forces.

Snap Poll: Who Will Make the Best Foreign Policy President?

Foreign Policy - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 19:48
From climate change to the Islamic State, from Russia to China, we asked scholars who they want tackling America's biggest problems.

Declassified: US Attempts to Rein in Chiang Ching-kuo’s Nuclear Ambitions

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 19:05
The Carter administration had to make sure Taiwan didn't renege on a 1976 nuclear pledge.

Bees can help boost food security of two billion small farmers at no cost – UN

UN News Centre - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 18:57
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) today highlighted the publication of a new study that quantifies, for the first time, how much crop yields depend on the work of bees that unknowingly fertilize plants as they move from flower to flower.

China Hits Back at International Criticisms Over South China Sea Missiles

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 18:56
Plus, updates to previous reports on Ling Wancheng, Cornwallis Reef, and Liu Xiaobo Plaza. Friday China links.

From asthma to Zika, UN tackles links between environment and health

UN News Centre - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 18:30
The list of health conditions that can be linked to environmental pollution and degradation is long and growing, including skin cancer, lung cancer, asthma, lead poisoning, mercury poisoning, malaria, Ebola and Zika, according to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

How to Fight ISIS Messaging in Central Asia? Religious Freedom

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 17:39
In a recent discussion, Noah Tucker argues that religious freedom--as a policy--is simply the best counter to ISIS messaging efforts.

Déluge de bombes sur le code du travail

Le Monde Diplomatique - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 17:14
Le patronat et Nicolas Sarkozy en rêvaient, MM. François Hollande et Manuel Valls l'ont fait : si, par hypothèse funeste, le projet de loi « visant à instituer de nouvelles libertés et de nouvelles protections pour les entreprises et les actifs » (sic) devait voir le jour, le code du travail (...) / , , , , , , , , , - La valise diplomatique

Slavery and Forced Labor in Brazil

Foreign Policy Blogs - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 17:07

“Departure for the coffee harvest by ox cart, Vale do Paraíba, Brazil, c. 1885” (image courtesy of Instituto Moreira Salles)

Of all of the countries in the Americas, Brazil imported the most slaves from Africa and was the last to officially abolish slavery. While slavery may have been abolished officially with the signing of the Lei Áurea (Golden Law) by Princesa Isabel on May 13, 1888, forced labor, or “trabalho escravo”, took its place.  

Forced labor, which the International Labor Organization (ILO) defines as involving “degrading work conditions and the impossibility of leaving the employer owing to fraudulent debts and the presence of armed guards,” was officially acknowledged by the State in 1995.  That same year, Brazil’s Ministry of Labor initiated a Special Mobile Enforcement Group to track down companies suspected of using slave workers.

In 2002, the ILO and the Brazilian government initiated a technical cooperation project called “Combating Forced Labour”. Since then, around 50,000 workers have been freed from slave-like conditions in Brazil.

Yet there is more work to be done as the practice continues to this day. This month saw the publication of a “dirty list” by the human rights group Reporter Brazil, which named and shamed 340 Brazilian companies caught employing people in slave-like conditions between May 2013 and May 2015. The companies had previously been identified and fined by Brazil’s Ministry of Labor, which accused them of using slave labor, forced labor, and employing workers for little or no pay in degrading conditions.

Companies were associated with clothing sweatshops, farming and cattle ranching, timber and charcoal production, and construction. More than 1,500 adults and 5,500 children were released during 2014.

While Reporter Brazil used the country’s Freedom of Information Act to reveal the names of companies and individuals found by government inspectors to use slave labor, the practice of tracking down forced labor in Brazil is a dangerous one. Three Brazilian judicial officials were murdered in January 2004 while looking into allegations of slavery on ranches near the nation’s capital, Brasília.

The following month, government inspectors discovered 32 slave workers on the ranch of right-wing Senator João Ribeiro in the northern state of Pará. The officials said the captives worked seven days a week without pay and had no running water or toilets.

In 2009, the ILO estimated that between 25,000-40,000 people were being exploited in Brazil, primarily in the states of Pará and Mato Grosso. Other organizations such as The Global Slavery Index put the number much higher in 2015, at around 155,000. These workers are primarily recruited from the cities of Brazil’s impoverished Nordeste region.

Recruiters, often referred to as “gatos” (cats), lure the poor with promises of good pay for hard work, and some are told the cost of their transportation will be deducted from future wages. The workers are then transported hundreds of kilometers away to work in logging camps, or on ranches raising cattle or tending to crops. Many workers are only told once they arrive at the camp or ranch that they will now be responsible for paying the costs of their transportation, which are often inflated.

In addition, if they are held in collection points for days or weeks, all food, housing and other expenses they incur are deducted from their future wages—usually at inflated prices. And the price-gouging does not end there. Since the camp or ranch is typically isolated from nearby cities or towns and transportation is limited, employers often charge a premium for bringing such provisions as food, drink, and other essentials to the site.

When you add the inflated upfront costs to the ongoing necessities of food, drink and shelter, it is little wonder the typical worker quickly becomes trapped economically. Why does the typical worker stay when he or she realizes his predicament? Isolation, threats, violence and sometimes homicide can make it a difficult and dangerous choice.

What can be done to curb the practice of slavery and forced labor in Brazil? The government has already developed a database of offenders, yet the aforementioned mobile inspection group could be strengthened, as could the rehabilitation program for former slaves which grants them three months pay, builds job skills and offers them legal assistance.  

A national pact has also been initiated with the help of ILO. It has been signed by almost 200 hundred private and public companies since 2005, obliging them to remove from their supply chains any inputs produced with the involvement of forced labor.

The efforts of the Brazilian government to combat forced labor, 120 years after the abolishment of slavery, have to date been laudatory, but must continue and intensify.

The post Slavery and Forced Labor in Brazil appeared first on Foreign Policy Blogs.

China Military Commission Digs Deep to Root Out Corruption

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 16:10
The Chinese military’s Discipline Inspection Commission is spending Chinese New Year checking out the PLA’s “style.”

Discovering Cyrus the Great’s Secrets in Modern Iran

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 16:08
2,500 years after his death, Cyrus the Great's tomb in Iran remains a site of mystery and wonder.

The Islamic State Threat Is Real in Pakistan

TheDiplomat - Fri, 19/02/2016 - 15:30
Pakistan needs to act decisively against all militant groups and their terror loaded ideology.

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