According to a statement from SEF, the sentence was read last
week against two Portuguese women, aged 57 and 39, who were sentenced to prison
terms of three years and nine months and two years and two months, respectively,
for committing the crimes of aiding illegal immigration and recruiting illegal
labour.
The crimes investigated by SEF date back to July 2016, when
the two women recruited several citizens of Hindu origin (India, Bangladesh and
Pakistan) in the Martim Moniz area of Lisbon (India, Bangladesh and Pakistan)
to work for the agricultural company which they represented, in Famalicão,
“promising further assistance in their legalisation, since they were all in an
irregular situation in national territory”.
According to the service that controls the Portuguese
borders, in September of the same year, one of the defendants transported the
citizens to the Algarve, where they were housed in containers on a farm.
The court has now found that citizens were exploited at
work, “working between eight and 12 hours a day, seven days a week, not being
monetarily compensated for the work, nor having been paid the agreed amount or
food allowance”.
The SEF statement also states that it has been proven that
the defendants “took advantage of the fragility in which these foreign citizens
found themselves”.
“The group of judges understood that the defendants knew
that by hiring, transporting, housing and benefiting from the work of these
foreign citizens, they favoured and facilitated the illegal stay of foreigners
in national territory”, concludes the SEF.