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Article

18 Sep 2025

Author:
Reuters

Brazil: Minister intervenes in investigation into JBS forced labour and suspends inclusion on the 'Dirty List'; incl. company's comments

Allegations

Agência Brasil - EBC

"Brazilian minister intervenes in JBS slave labor investigation", 18 September 2025

...Brazilian Labor Minister Luiz Marinho is carrying out an unusual final review of an investigation that could blacklist a poultry unit of meatpacker JBS SA for subjecting workers to "slavery-like conditions," according to documents seen by Reuters. That interruption of the usual process has stoked concerns among labor inspectors and legal experts who called it an unprecedented move that could introduce political influence into Brazil's decades-long effort to combat modern slavery.

The Labor Ministry did not respond to a detailed set of questions, but said the proceeding is ongoing and appeals by JBS are still under analysis.

The case stems from a federal raid last year that found ten people working in slavery-like conditions for a contractor hired to load and unload cargo for a JBS poultry unit called JBS Aves, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. Inspectors found that workers were subjected to illegally long shifts for as long as 16 hours and housed without access to clean drinking water, according to a report seen by Reuters. The contractor had also made unlawful deductions from workers' wages, making it harder for them to quit, the report found.

In a statement, JBS told Reuters on Thursday it immediately suspended the contractor, terminated the contract and blocked the company upon learning of the allegations. "The company has zero tolerance for labor and human rights violations," the statement added. Labor inspectors ruled on August 6 that JBS was responsible for the working conditions of the ten employees, as it failed to conduct due diligence ensuring the contractor was treating them lawfully.

Typically, such a ruling would result in the inclusion of the company in a list of employers responsible for submitting workers to slavery...Beyond the reputational risks associated with the listing, companies are also barred from obtaining certain types of loans from Brazilian banks, which could mean serious financial consequences for a company linked to one of Brazil's largest firms...

The ministry's decision could have consequences beyond the JBS case, as it sets precedent for other firms to petition the minister to intervene in their cases, said Livia Miraglia, a labor law professor at the Federal University of Minas Gerais who specializes in slave labor cases for over 20 years."I have never seen anything like it," she said...

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