Health Ministry regularizes hiring in indigenous territories

Brazil's Health Ministry signed a conciliation agreement on Thursday (9) with the Labor Public Prosecutor's Office and the Attorney General's Office, ending a 2007 civil public action on hiring in indigenous territories. The 18,500 workers, nearly 70% indigenous, are now hired directly by the Brazilian Agency for SUS Management Support under the CLT regime. Another 1,018 are in the hiring process under the new model.

The Health Ministry has regularized the hiring of workers in indigenous territories, shifting from decentralized agreements with temporary contracts to the CLT model managed by the Brazilian Agency for SUS Management Support.

Previously, the old system drew scrutiny from oversight bodies and the Labor Public Prosecutor's Office, which highlighted issues like difficulties in accountability, poor working conditions, hiring delays, and even signs of political appointments of indigenous people. This led to a civil public action filed in 2007, ongoing in court for over 20 years.

On Thursday (9), the ministry signed the conciliation agreement, resolving the legal disputes. According to the ministry, 18,500 professionals previously hired via agreements have been regularized, with nearly 70% being indigenous. Additionally, 1,018 new hires are underway under the updated regime.

Makala yanayohusiana

Centrist leaders in Brazil's Congress resist voting on public perks bill without Lula government, amid STF 60-day deadline.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Centrist bloc resists voting on perks regulation without government

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Centrist leaders in Brazil's lower house want to avoid voting on a bill regulating extra perks and supersalaries for public servants unless President Lula's government engages directly. The Supreme Federal Court suspended these benefits and ordered Congress to legislate within 60 days, but the deadline is deemed too short in an election year. The STF plenary is judging the decisions this week.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva annulled presidential decree 12.600/2025, which called for studies on concessions for waterways on the Tapajós, Madeira, and Tocantins rivers. The decision followed actions by indigenous movements opposed to the projects, including invasions of private properties. The government described the measure as active listening to community demands.

Imeripotiwa na AI

The number of municipal employees in Brazil rose 21% from December 2021 to 2025, from 6.2 million to 7.5 million, according to IBGE's Pnad data compiled by economist Bruno Imaizumi. This outpaces growth in other public sectors and private formal employment. The surge reflects population demands and fiscal improvements.

Health Minister May Chomali voiced concern over an Interior Subsecretariat indication requiring health centers to share data on irregular migrant patients. The government clarified that the measure respects patient rights and aims to support specific migration procedures.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Colombia's State Council provisionally suspended Decree 0182 of 2026, which reorganized health insurers territorially and capped the number of providers per region. The decision follows a lawsuit by Representative Katherine Miranda warning of forced transfers of millions of users to Nueva EPS.

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa