RIO DE JANEIRO, April 9 (Reuters) – A Brazilian court has issued an injunction ​removing Chinese automaker BYD, opens new tab from a government list of ‌firms accused of employing workers in slavery-like conditions, a document seen by Reuters on Thursday showed.

The injunction issued by labor court judge Luiz Fausto Marinho ​de Medeiros provisionally removes BYD’s name from the list until ​a final ruling is reached.

The order, dated Wednesday, says ⁠that adding the firm to Brazil’s so-called “dirty list” was possibly ​illegal as the decision was based on the premise that ​BYD was the real employer of the workers. The decision can be appealed.

The firm was added over a 2024 case where a BYD contractor hired 163 ​workers, some of whom had contracts saying they had to ​hand over their passports, let most of their wages be sent directly to ‌China, ⁠and pay an almost $900 deposit that they could only get back after six months’ work.

BYD did not immediately reply to a request for comment. The firm has previously said it had no ​knowledge of any ​violations until ⁠reports by Brazilian media in late November 2024.

The workers were housed in what authorities describe as “degrading ​conditions” in Brazil’s northeastern state of Bahia. At the ​time, authorities ⁠said BYD was ultimately responsible for the workers’ conditions as it should be supervising its contractors.

Beyond the reputational damage, being added to ⁠the ​list bars firms from obtaining certain ​types of loans from Brazilian banks.

The Brazilian government also did not immediately reply to ​a request for comment.