One year, 10 suicides in Chinese electronics factory
May 27th, 2010 - 3:26 pm ICT by IANSBeijing, May 27 (IANS) Ten people have committed suicide in a Chinese electronics factory this year, the latest being a 23-year-old who jumped off a balcony hours after the owner visited the plant to stop the string of deaths, police said Thursday.
Investigation into the latest death at Foxconn Technology Group’s Shenzhen plant Wednesday night showed that the employee committed suicide.
The Public Security Bureau in Shenzhen said the man, surnamed He, was 23 years old and belonged to northwest China’s Gansu Province. He started working at the plant June 18 last year.
Witnesses saw the man jump from a balcony on the seventh floor of the a dormitory building at the plant, Xinhua quote police as saying.
It was the 12th such attempt at the plant this year. While 10 died, two employees survived their suicide attempts but sustained severe injuries.
The latest suicide occurred just hours after Foxconn head Terry Gou promised better welfare for the company’s employees and the government urged young workers to cherish their lives.
Gou accompanied around 300 Chinese and foreign reporters on an inspection of the plant Wednesday. The plant opened its doors to reporters in a bid to repair its image damaged by suicides.
He promised the firm would do everything possible to prevent more deaths. Nets have been set up to discourage people from jumping and about 100 mental health counsellors were being trained.
Of Foxconn’s 800,000 employees in China, 420,000 are based in Shenzhen.
“Many of our young employees are away from home and they need care from family members. This is something that the company can not provide,” Gou said.
DPA adds: Foxconn, the world’s largest contract maker of electronics, produces computers, mobile phones and gaming consoles for firms such as Apple Inc, Sony Corp, Dell Inc, Hewlett-Packard Co and Nokia Corp.
About 420,000 people work at the plant, and most live in dormitories on the factory grounds. Some have complained on the internet of long working hours, almost daily overtime, low pay, beatings and verbal abuse by their Taiwan supervisors, but Foxconn
officials have denied abuse of workers with Guo saying the factory “is not a sweatshop”.
Experts said the potential causes for the spate of suicides were work pressure, lack of a social network for the uprooted migrant workers and personal isolation.
- 10th Suicide in a Chinese Factory - May 27, 2010
- Foxconn refutes 'sweatshop' allegation after employee suicides - May 25, 2010
- Eleventh Suicide In A Year In Chinese Factory - May 27, 2010
- Foxconn plans to create 400,000 new jobs - Aug 19, 2010
- Foxconn to shift some plants in China - Jul 08, 2010
- Foxconn's Shenzen factory to increase wages by 20% in light of employee suicides - May 29, 2010
- Wage rise at Foxconn after string of suicides - Jun 02, 2010
- Foxconn staff in China get 66 percent pay hike - Oct 02, 2010
- Another Foxconn worker falls to death in China - Nov 05, 2010
- Foxconn workers rally to boost morale - Aug 19, 2010
- Foxconn denies accusations of illegal working conditions in China - Oct 12, 2010
- Taiwan's Foxconn shuts Chennai plant after workers fall ill from alleged pesticide spray - Jul 28, 2010
- Woman commits suicide at China Foxconn plant - Nov 25, 2011
- Chinese factory asks for a 'no suicide vow' from its employees - May 27, 2010
- No compensation if staff commits suicide: Foxconn - Jun 09, 2010
Tags: 23 years, balcony, chinese electronics, dell inc, dormitories, dormitory, foxconn, gaming consoles, hewlett packard co, man jump, nokia corp, northwest china, public security bureau, shenzhen, sony corp, suicide attempts, suicides, technology group, terry gou, xinhua