Dubai Telegraph - African migrants face racism, violence in Brazil

EUR -
AED 4.178058
AFN 80.791251
ALL 98.690885
AMD 442.3331
ANG 2.050084
AOA 1043.643014
ARS 1339.967543
AUD 1.775608
AWG 2.050323
AZN 1.93279
BAM 1.954638
BBD 2.278325
BDT 138.166632
BGN 1.953411
BHD 0.428698
BIF 3382.074155
BMD 1.137489
BND 1.490107
BOB 7.857259
BRL 6.437954
BSD 1.137114
BTN 96.857983
BWP 15.524701
BYN 3.721371
BYR 22294.777541
BZD 2.284222
CAD 1.575063
CDF 3274.829622
CHF 0.939223
CLF 0.027939
CLP 1072.139675
CNY 8.297978
CNH 8.2737
COP 4794.423661
CRC 574.853139
CUC 1.137489
CUP 30.143449
CVE 110.198507
CZK 24.925806
DJF 202.497815
DKK 7.464018
DOP 67.009567
DZD 150.733151
EGP 57.80433
ERN 17.06233
ETB 152.214555
FJD 2.567195
FKP 0.849313
GBP 0.849772
GEL 3.11624
GGP 0.849313
GHS 16.261188
GIP 0.849313
GMD 80.761393
GNF 9849.057171
GTQ 8.757793
GYD 238.616021
HKD 8.825166
HNL 29.509454
HRK 7.533017
HTG 148.790221
HUF 404.125773
IDR 19061.466053
ILS 4.120667
IMP 0.849313
INR 96.843679
IQD 1489.714217
IRR 47902.488619
ISK 146.13291
JEP 0.849313
JMD 180.132893
JOD 0.806706
JPY 162.341254
KES 147.020675
KGS 99.473704
KHR 4552.273211
KMF 491.964745
KPW 1023.855541
KRW 1632.961623
KWD 0.348447
KYD 0.947628
KZT 581.681576
LAK 24596.158909
LBP 101887.621965
LKR 340.634464
LRD 227.432769
LSL 21.100754
LTL 3.358708
LVL 0.688056
LYD 6.221246
MAD 10.548328
MDL 19.570278
MGA 5131.903458
MKD 61.481417
MMK 2388.481791
MNT 4063.542884
MOP 9.086397
MRU 45.019232
MUR 51.40089
MVR 17.528255
MWK 1971.810228
MXN 22.296779
MYR 4.92248
MZN 72.799163
NAD 21.100754
NGN 1823.70093
NIO 41.844751
NOK 11.801752
NPR 154.973172
NZD 1.910445
OMR 0.437954
PAB 1.137114
PEN 4.169084
PGK 4.711199
PHP 63.820504
PKR 319.450746
PLN 4.27131
PYG 9106.585231
QAR 4.145535
RON 4.978333
RSD 117.129325
RUB 92.993347
RWF 1625.519177
SAR 4.266738
SBD 9.502935
SCR 16.366901
SDG 683.061626
SEK 10.966067
SGD 1.489939
SHP 0.893887
SLE 25.835423
SLL 23852.549776
SOS 649.910707
SRD 41.916957
STD 23543.718475
SVC 9.949996
SYP 14789.583175
SZL 21.093458
THB 37.996105
TJS 12.008154
TMT 3.98121
TND 3.401577
TOP 2.664114
TRY 43.724131
TTD 7.715345
TWD 36.743048
TZS 3056.991512
UAH 47.24241
UGX 4167.485378
USD 1.137489
UYU 47.881109
UZS 14724.244974
VES 98.446128
VND 29580.392344
VUV 137.985323
WST 3.150948
XAF 655.56432
XAG 0.034207
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.07412
XDR 0.814056
XOF 655.5672
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.795525
ZAR 21.098879
ZMK 10238.756594
ZMW 31.811805
ZWL 366.270881
  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    10.25

    +0.68%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.27

    -0.22%

  • BCC

    -1.0800

    94.25

    -1.15%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    9.92

    +0.6%

  • NGG

    0.1750

    73.025

    +0.24%

  • RIO

    0.1400

    61.01

    +0.23%

  • VOD

    0.0150

    9.585

    +0.16%

  • RELX

    0.2300

    53.59

    +0.43%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.85

    +0.39%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    42.48

    +0.21%

  • BP

    -0.7000

    28.43

    -2.46%

  • AZN

    0.6600

    70.59

    +0.93%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    38.41

    +0.91%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.45

    -0.13%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    22.12

    +1.4%

African migrants face racism, violence in Brazil
African migrants face racism, violence in Brazil

African migrants face racism, violence in Brazil

The brutal murder of a Congolese man at a Rio de Janeiro beach has cast a harsh spotlight on the ordeals African migrants face in Brazil, the country with the biggest black population outside Africa.

Text size:

Moise Kabagambe, a 24-year-old migrant who fled to Brazil with his family in 2011 to escape violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, was beaten to death with clubs and a baseball bat at the beach-front bar where he worked in Rio's upscale Barra da Tijuca neighborhood.

His family says a group of assailants attacked him after he demanded payment of two days' overdue wages.

The January 24 killing has unleashed a flood of outrage, grief and soul-searching in Brazil, where many African migrants say they face poverty, violence and double discrimination as both foreigners and blacks.

"I'm thinking of leaving Brazil after what happened with Moise. I'm afraid for my children," said Sagrace Lembe Menga, who also fled the conflict-torn Democratic Republic of Congo, arriving in 2015.

The 33-year-old refugee and mother of two says she has regularly faced racism in her adoptive country, especially at the salon where she works as a hair stylist.

"Some people treat you like you're insignificant, like an animal," she told AFP.

"I've had people ask me if I live with giraffes."

- Lack of opportunity -

Brazil has 1,050 refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo, and around 35,000 African immigrants in all -- though experts say the official figure is likely an underestimate.

They often live in poor slums dominated by drug gangs, and are paid far less than other immigrants in Brazil -- an average of 2,698 reais ($510) a month, compared with 4,878 reais a month for all immigrants combined.

"If I had to tell the story of every incident of racism I've faced, I could write a book," said Elisee Mpembele, 23, a Congolese singer who arrived in Brazil in 2013.

"Wary looks, stares, security guards following me around the supermarket. The other day, I asked some police officers for directions, and they ended up searching me."

He said finding work as a musician was tough, so he often had to resort to odd jobs to make ends meet.

Racism and discrimination are nothing new in Brazil, home to the second-biggest black population in the world, after Nigeria.

The country was the last in the Americas to abolish slavery, in 1888, and blacks still face deep-rooted poverty, exclusion and systemic racism.

As foreigners, African migrants are even worse off.

The racism they face in Brazil "is all the more perverse given that 55 percent of Brazilians are black," said Bas'llele Malomalo, an expert on African-Brazilian migration at Unilab university.

"The integration problems faced by African migrants have the same roots as those encountered by former slaves, who were still seen as objects, as animals, at abolition," he said.

- 'Keep my head down' -

All too often, racism also translates into violence.

Seventy-seven percent of homicide victims in Brazil in 2019 were black.

The danger for black foreigners is even greater, said Malomalo.

"In the minds of the racists, since it's a foreigner, no one's going to defend him," he said.

"Whenever someone hassles me, I just keep my head down to avoid any problems," said Modou Fall, a 34-year-old Senegalese migrant who sells sunglasses on Rio's famed Copacabana beach.

"It's hard working here. I struggle to send money to my family."

Many Africans arrive in Brazil full of "entrepreneurial spirit," said Rui Mucaje, head of the Afro-Brazilian Chamber of Commerce (AfroChamber.)

But most end up doing menial jobs in the informal sector, he said.

"It's not uncommon to see people with university degrees end up working jobs they're way overqualified for," he said.

As examples, he cited an engineer who is working at a supermarket and a surveyor working as a hotel cleaner.

Kabagambe's killing, he said, is "the tragic result of the problems created by racism in Brazil."

I.Khan--DT