Brazilian meat plants helped spread Covid-19 in at least three different places across the country as the virus continues to migrate from big cities to the country’s vast interior, experts have said.
At the beginning of this week the country was second only to the US with 1.88mn confirmed Covid-19 cases and 72,833 deaths.
Its powerful agribusiness sector is allied with the country’s far-right President, Jair Bolsonaro, who has dismissed the pandemic as a “little flu”.
The beef sector is worth $26bn, according to the Brazilian Confederation of Agriculture and Livestock (CNA), while its chicken industry is worth another $8bn.
Meat plants have stayed open during the pandemic, and staff work closely together, often in refrigerated areas.
Other countries, including the US, Canada, Ireland and Germany, have also seen clusters around slaughterhouses.
The conditions can create perfect Covid-19 breeding centres, said Priscila Schvarcz, a prosecutor from the public ministry of labour (MPT), a branch of the federal prosecution service charged with supervising labour laws.
“We see a lot of workers infected,” said Schvarcz, a member of a national meat plant taskforce based in Rio Grande do Sul state in southern Brazil.
Rio Grande do Sul has been hard hit. As of June 23, 4,957 meat workers had tested positive at 32 plants in the state – a third of the total coronavirus cases in the area, prosecutors said.
Five employees and 12 people in contact with them had died.
A study for the MPT showed that Covid-19 cases in central and southern Brazil were clustered around towns where meat plants were located and workers lived.“There is a direct relationship,” said Ernesto Galindo, the researcher who produced the study.
China, Brazil’s biggest trading partner, suspended imports of meat from plants owned by two of Brazil’s largest meat companies, BRF and JBS, at the beginning of this month.
Brazil’s ministry of agriculture also suspended exports from a JBS plant in Rio Grande do Sul, business daily Valor said.
BRF said it was working with the Brazilian and Chinese authorities to resume deliveries.
The company said that 98 of 2,873 workers at its plant in Lajeado, Rio Grande do Sul, tested positive in late May.
JBS did not comment on China’s suspension of imports.
At a JBS plant in Dourados, in Mato Grosso do Sul state in the centre-west region, more than 4,000 employees were tested and nearly a quarter were positive, prosecutors said.
The company suspended 1,600 workers on full pay but did not close the plant.
As of July 14, the town had 3,481 cases, a quarter of the state’s total.
The JBS plant in Dourados “was the initial focus for the outbreak”, said Andyane Tetila, an infectious diseases specialist in Dourados who works for the state health service.
The JBS plant has 103 indigenous workers, many of whom live in nearby reserves where more than 150 people were subsequently infected, said Indianara Machado, an indigenous nurse who works in the reserve.
JBS said it had put all its indigenous workers on paid leave and is supporting initiatives to control and prevent new coronavirus outbreaks in more than 100 municipalities across Brazil.
Labour prosecutors said JBS moved quickly to contain the outbreak.“The company collaborated,” said Jeferson Pereira, a labour prosecutor in Dourados.“It contracted nurses and technicians to accompany visits.”
Another 85 people tested positive at a BRF plant in the town.
The company said workers in this situation are suspended on pay, given medical attention and monitored by occupational health specialists at the company until they recover.
In June, a judge closed a JBS plant in the remote Amazon town of Sao Miguel do Guaporé in the north-west of Brazil for the second time after infections rocketed.
As of June 25, 377 of the plant’s 940 employees were infected – then more than half of the town’s caseload, prosecutors said.
Leandro da Conceiçao, 33, one of the workers in the plant, said he lost his sense of smell and taste.
When he told his supervisor, he was ignored and kept working even though he got sicker and sicker.
“It reached a point I couldn’t stand it any more. I told my superior I was not well,” he said. “His focus was the cows, not the employees, it was production.”
Conceição was sent home after he produced his own positive test result.
He and another worker later lost their jobs after a WhatsApp audio that featured them and other workers complaining about infections at the plant was published by local media.
Both men were told falling production was the motive. “They had no reason to sack us,” he said. “I never missed work.”
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