Tensions
High In China's iPhone Factory After Massive Riot
28
September, 2012
Tensions
remain high at Foxconn’s iPhone factory in northern China after a
violent mass riot that workers said was sparked by poor work and
living conditions. The riot, which has left 40 people injured and
impacted about 2,000 workers, has highlighted the complex task facing
Chinese manufacturers as they struggle to control costs amid a
slowing economy and deal with a younger generation of Chinese workers
who demand more comfortable lifestyles and are less willing than
their parents to tolerate extremely hard working conditions.
Foxconn,
the trading name for Taiwan-based Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., is
Apple‘s largest contract manufacturer and has more than 1 million
workers in China. The Taiyuan factory, which employs 79,000 people,
resumed production Wednesday after shutting down temporarily due to
the riot, Foxconn said in a statement this week. But tensions
remained high as police officers still stood guard inside the plant
wearing riot helmets, according to photos and tweets posted by
employees on China’s microblogs.
The
company didn’t specify the cause of the incident in the statement.
But according to a news report by 21st Century Business Herald on
Wednesday, employees said the riot turned from a personal dorm
squabble into battles between police and about 2000 workers after the
guards responded with excessive force.
They
said pressures from working long hours on assembly lines, usually 10
to 12 hours per day, discontent about the crowded dorms and
military-like discipline were all likely contributing factors to the
violence.
Eight
to 10 people share a single room, with as many as 30 rooms on each
floor, workers said. The guards closely supervise the workers and
have been known to bully workers for breaching the rules.
“The
incident happened in the dormitories, not in [the] workplace. We need
to look further into the real cause,” Hon Hai spokesman Louis Woo
said after the riot.
Terry
Gou, chairman of Hong Hai and a Forbes billionaire with a recent net
worth of $6.3 billion, has already flown to Taiyuan to handle the
incident, a report by China Times on Wednesday quoted a source as
saying.
The
news also comes as Apple announced that it sold more than 5 million
new iPhones in its first weekend of the iPhone 5 and that demand for
the phones outstripped the company’s supply. The company said it
was able to fill a majority of pre-orders but that some will be
delayed until October.
The
incident has highlighted growing tension in China’s factories as
companies struggle to meet worker demands for better compensation and
work conditions while controlling costs amid a slowing economy. To
combat rising costs and worker attrition, Hon Hai has been moving its
factories inland, away from the more expensive Chinese coastline.
Hon
Hai’s first-half profit rose 0.5% to $918 million from a year
earlier, mainly because of deeper losses from its investment in
Japanese handset maker Sharp. Its net margin fell to 1.4% in the
second quarter from 1.5% in the first.
In
recent years, Foxconn has drawn much public attention due to a series
of suicides among young workers. These incidents have pushed the
company to adopt preventive measures against such radical decisions.
Foxconn
has defended the compensation level and work conditions at its
factories. In August, Foxconn raised salaries by more than 16 percent
at a Zhengzhou factory making iPhones after the U.S. Fair Labor
Association said workers were working long hours and not paid
overtime. Earlier this year, the company agreed to change its labor
practices.
Many
reports said factory riots are bound to recur as the docile first
generation migrant workers have become more savvy about their rights
and willing to stand up for them. The younger generation of workers,
many of whom were born in the 1990s, are better educated and more
plugged in.
An
investigation by the U.S. Fair Labor Association in Foxconn’s
Chinese plants in March pointed out the excessive overtime problems,
health hazard and safety risks. The report also mentioned that doing
precision work in quick repetition had discouraged workers from
communication and thereby resulted in emotional problems, which may
lead to eruption of certain issues in factories.
Analysts
also worry that tensions may continue to swell in the factories,
where shipping contracts are due and management seeks longer working
days.
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