Report:
Riots break out at Foxconn factory in China
Reports
early Monday from China suggest that a mass disturbance or riots may
have broken out at a Foxconn factory in the Chinese city of Taiyuan.
NBC,
23
September, 2012
It
is still unclear what exactly happened, but posts on China’s
popular twitter-like service, Weibo, from users in the area show
photographs and video of large numbers of police in and around the
factory – many in riot gear – blocking off throngs of people.
Other
photos show debris strewn around the Foxconn compound and in one
case, an overturned guard tower.
According
to popular tech blog engadget, the
disturbance kicked off after Foxconn security guards allegedly
hit a worker around 10 p.m. on Sunday.
Censors
in China have reportedly already started deleting pictures from the
scene.
This
is not the first time that Foxconn has had problems with its Taiyuan
facility, which is reportedly responsible for the fabrication of the
back plate of the immensely popular new iPhone 5. In March, strikes
broke out there after workers did not receive a pay raise they had
reportedly been promised.
Meanwhile,
Foxconn’s Chengdu plant in Sichuan province also has dealt with
riots. In June, scores of Foxconn workers there got into a fight with
a local restaurant owner that had to be broken up by police.
Foxconn
is the Taiwanese electronics manufacturer responsible for much of the
current production and assembly of Apple’s popular line of products
as well as a wide variety of popular tech toys ranging from laptops
to gaming consoles.
But
Foxconn has been under fire for years for its tough working
conditions, including long hours, low wages and strict rules on
representation. The company has also dealt with a string of suicides
at its plants across China, which led to the company in 2010
installing anti-jump nets to prevent more suicide attempts.
The
company has taken steps to improve working conditions in its
factories by reducing work hours and raising wages for its front-line
workers.
Still,
perhaps wary of the continued negative publicity that has plagued one
of its primary manufacturers over the years, Apple recently took
steps to diversify its portfolio of producers, recently awarding much
of the manufacturing of its new iteration of the iPad to another
Taiwanese company, Pegatron.
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