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Date: 2024-04-20 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00016501

Corporate Responsibility
Slave Labor in the Supply Chain

Two Major Brazilian Fashion Brands Land on 'Dirty List'

Burgess COMMENTARY

Peter Burgess
Two Major Brazilian Fashion Brands Land on 'Dirty List'

Officials in Brazil have placed two of the country’s top fashion brands on a government “dirty list” due to their use of slave labor.

The manufacturing of brands A.Brand and Animale was outsourced by Fabula Confecçao e Comercio de Roupas to three workshops in São Paulo where Bolivians in slavery-like conditions. The labor inspector said it rescued 10 Bolivians who worked 12-14 hours a day and slept on site.

The workers were paid a mere 5 reals ($1.30) for each piece of clothing, which retailed for 700 reals ($182).

Being placed on the “dirty list” is a major punishment as it now bars the companies from credit from state banks or other public financial support. Once added, a company stays on the “dirty list” for two years.

Thomson Reuters Foundation reports:

While Fabula does not own the workshops at issue, it was found by labor inspectors to be the real employer since the workshops took orders from Fabula and only serviced its brands.

“They were the ones setting the rules, so they have the responsibility,” Mauricio Krepsky, head of the Division of Inspection for the Eradication of Slave Labor, told Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Animale and A.Brand are two of the most well-known luxury brands owned by Grupo Soma, which owns Fabula. Soma has about 4,700 employees and had revenue of more than 1.2 billion reals ($312.28 million) in 2018, according to its website.

Grupo Soma issued a statement saying this was an isolated incident, noting that “In 27 years, A.Brand and Animale never had a case of a direct supplier involved with any sort of work analogous to slavery.”

The use of subcontractors in Brazil is quite common, with thousands of immigrant subcontractors from Bolivia and Paraguay making clothes for national retailers.

Take Action: Help End Forced Labor

Thursday April 4, 2019
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