This is not an isolated case.
According to the Brazilian government, two Sao Paulo workshops in which illegal immigrants Zara clothing manufactured under conditions that brushed against slavery are just the tip of the iceberg.
The Ministry of Labor of the South American giant ensures that at least 33 other workshops subcontracted by the Galician company would have detected the same irregularities: overcrowding, unsanitary working conditions and poverty wages .
But the multinational Inditex, which owns Zara , insists that it is an "exceptional situation" , as noted yesterday El Confidencial an official spokesman of the textile group founded by Amancio Ortega .
As revealed yesterday fiscal audit of the Ministry of Labor Juliana Cassiano newspaper O Globo , the largest circulationthe country, most of the 15 Bolivian and Peruvian immigrants released in two workshops of Sao Paulo had no documents had been smuggled into Brazil networks trafficking in human beings and worked in a "terrible" conditions.
His workday was 16 hours a day, crammed with five children in a tiny space that served both workshop and housing , with one dirty bathroom and no hot water, "and everything to gain 200 or 300 actual [between 90 and 130 euros] and be in debt to the mafias .
The situation was very, very serious ".
Inditex returned yesterday to hold firm AHA, one of its 50 suppliers in Brazil, having contracted in an "unauthorized" making garments Zara in two clandestine textile workshops discovered by the authorities of that country.
But the Ministry of Labor inspectors reject the arguments of the multinational Arteixo (A Coruña). "If we can trace the production chain, Inditex can also do so" , says Cassiano.
"And if Inditex is able to control the quality of its products throughout the production process, why not do the same with labor hiring?".
Second operation since May
Last May, a similar operation deployed to Sao Paulo allowed the Regional Superintendent of Labor and Employment dismantle several sweatshops in the city of Americana , within the Sao Paulo region.
On that occasion they were freed 52 workers, nearly all Bolivian nationals, who were being exploited and subjected to a degrading working conditions.
According to sources from the television network Band 's second in Brazil, whose reporters uncovered the alleged irregularities committed by Zara in Sao Paulo - most of the 52 workers slaves freed also elaborated garments for Spanish fashion brand.
The spokesman for Inditex consulted by El Confidencial said that "the seriousness of this company is exemplary , " and noted that the textile group held annually over a thousand supplier audits of their brands around the world to ensure they meet your code of conduct .
"We are collaborating with the Brazilian authorities to review the production systems of our suppliers and prevent cases like Sao Paulo reoccur".
The representative of the Galician multinational dodged commenting, however, the denunciation of the Ministry of Labor on the existence of at least another 30 sweatshops linked to Zara.
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