Staff work on the assembly line at Hon Hai Group's Foxconn plant in Shenzhen. The company assembles a range of electronic goods for companies including Hewlett-Packard and Apple. Photo Credit: Telegraph UK
FoxConn is always in the news and its usually bad press despite the fact that they could be the famous ( not notorious ) group for making the Jesus Phones and iPad and so many things for Apple and many other companies.
The last year’s incidents of Foxconn’s overworked employees committing suicides are still fresh in everyone’s mind and yet another blow, the explosion at Chinese Foxconn iPad Factory, 16 Hurt, 2 Killed. Is there some conspiracy going on against the electronics’ component manufacturing giant or there is really something about the bad conditions at the workplace.
I suspect there is a mix of both. Yes now I am a conspiracy theorist. With everyone coming up with such theories about Osama, Obama and god knows who, I can come up with a pretty harmless theory of myself!
So back to the topic, here are some details about the incident.
At about 7 PM local time, an explosion at a Foxconn factory killed 2 people and injured 12, 3 of those seriously. The building is located in Chengdu, a high-tech region in the South of China, and is known for manufacturing iPads. The explosion was first revealed to the world thanks to an amateur video. It’s been reported that this incident might have been caused by fine powder used in the manufacturing process that somehow ( fishy fishy) ignited.

While Apple didn’t immediately reply for comment, a Foxconn spokesperson has acknowledged the incident but didn’t give any additional information. Meanwhile, law enforcement and firefighters were sent to the facility employing roughly 100,000 people and managed to take control of the situation shortly after. The cause for this explosion is unknown, but the City Government has ruled out foul play and attributed this incident to a technical fault.
In the beginning of the last decade, Apple used to manufacture most of its products at US-based factories, but during the early 2000s, the maker felt the need to cut costs while keeping up with increased demand, which led to the closing of virtually all manufacturing operations in the United States and Europe. Over the last decade, many other makers have felt the need to hire contract manufacturers to assemble their products, while shedding their own manufacturing workforce. Foxconn is one of those contract companies responsible for assembling many electronics we use on a daily basis, such as laptops of many brands, including MacBooks; iPads, iPhones and even some Nokia phones. This form of manufacturing is less costly for the maker, which results in cheaper electronics, but also in lower labor standards and accidents such as this one.
Foxconn hasn’t been known for the highest transparency or worker standards either. Over the years, several workers, forced to take over time, attempted, sometimes successfully, to commit suicides. In response, the company has reduced overtime, raised salaries and held internal rallies to motivate workers. That resulted in fewer suicides, but also in lost profits, as the company announced a loss last quarter, which will cause production to be moved to cheaper facilities.
Behind the shiny aluminum electronics we use everyday, there are overworked people, and sooner or later we’ll have to choose between paying a little bit more for fair working conditions, or holding on to our cheaper but still premium-priced electronics.
(Above news story via Gizmodo and Fahd Muratza)
facebook comments:

