Reuters – Carrefour and a Brazilian supermarket chain have severed ties with Brazilian companies involved in slave labour after coming under fire for buying meat sourced from blacklisted farmers.
The French supermarket retailer — Europe’s largest —- and Grupo Pão de Açucar (GPA) have pledged in recent years to keep their supply chains free of slave labour.
But in 2018 and 2019 the retailers worked with three meat packers that bought cattle from farms where dozens of workers were forced to work against their will, according to Reporter Brasil.
Read Also

New rules for organic farming on the table
Canada’s organic farmers have until July 29 to comment on new standards that would allow permit more products, but also crack down on organic management lapses.
The anti-slavery group on Wednesday said the farms were on Brazil’s “dirty list” of firms that have enslaved people or made them work in degrading conditions for little or no pay.
“After an internal investigation and explanations given by the supplier we decided to suspend the buying of products,” Carrefour Brasil Group said in a statement to the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
GPA suspended two suppliers as soon as it “was made aware of the facts,” it said.
Brazil exports billions of dollars of beef every year to countries including China. Cattle ranchers also supply meat to many of the 1,670 stores in the country operated by GPA and Carrefour.
In Brazil, slavery is defined as forced labour, as well as working for free to pay off debts incurred with an employer — known as bonded labour — demeaning work conditions and long hours that pose a health risk.
Reporter Brasil did not say how much of the meat from the three companies ended up on supermarket shelves.
Over 180 companies are currently named on the government’s blacklist used to fight modern-day slavery by barring businesses on it from receiving loans from state banks.