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TRADE WARS
1,000 strike at Apple supplier in China: rights group
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 24, 2011


About 1,000 workers at a plant in southern China that makes components for Apple and IBM went on strike this week, a rights group said, the latest in a string of labour disputes in the country.

Hundreds of police officers, some in riot gear, deployed after staff at the factory in the manufacturing hub of Shenzhen walked out on Tuesday and blocked a highway to protest long working hours, China Labour Watch said.

Staff at the plant commonly worked 100 to 120 hours of overtime a month and said they also suffered a high rate of workplace injuries, mass layoffs of older workers and frequent verbal abuse by managers, the US-based group said.

The plant, which employs 3,000 people in the Pearl River Delta -- home to millions of Chinese migrant workers -- is owned by Taiwan's Jingyuan Computer Group, which supplies components to Apple and IBM.

The strike ended after the company promised to reduce the amount of overtime, the rights organisation said in a statement. No one at the factory could immediately be reached for comment.

It was the latest in a recent spate of worker action in China, where strikes have historically been relatively rare as the country lacks truly independent trade unions.

More than 400 female workers at a bra factory in Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong, cut off the power and downed tools this week after a manager told one to "jump off a roof and go to hell".

And last week, more than 7,000 workers at a factory in nearby Dongguan making New Balance, Adidas and Nike shoes went on strike, clashing with police in a protest over layoffs and wage cuts.

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Foxconn worker jumps to her death in China: report
Beijing (AFP) Nov 25, 2011 - A woman employed by Taiwanese technology giant Foxconn jumped to her death from a company building in north China, state media said Thursday, the latest in a series of fatalities involving its workers.

The 20-year-old, named as Li Rongying, is believed to have killed herself by jumping from the fourth floor of a workshop at the company plant in Taiyuan in Shanxi province on Wednesday morning, the official Xinhua newswire reported.

She left a suicide note saying she had despaired over disappointment in a relationship, the report said, citing police. Her relatives have asked for an autopsy, it added.

Foxconn, which is the largest maker of computer components and assembles products for Apple -- including the iPhone -- plus Sony and Nokia, has come under the spotlight after suicides and labour unrest at its Chinese plants.

A young woman intern fell to her death from a dormitory at the company's plant in Zhenghzhou in central China in September, and a 21-year-old employee jumped to his death in July in the southern city of Shenzhen.

At least 13 employees died in apparent suicides in 2010, which activists blamed on tough working conditions, leading to calls for better treatment of staff.

Foxconn employs some one million workers in China, about half of them based in its main facility in Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong.



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