By Lorraine Luk
HONG KONG-- Apple Inc. assembler Foxconn Technology Group said
Friday that an employee died while working at its production site
in Zhengzhou, central China, the latest of several incidents that
have drawn scrutiny of its labor practices.
Foxconn didn't comment on the cause of death, though New
York-based nonprofit organization China Labor Watch said in a
report Thursday it was suicide. The cause of death couldn't be
independently verified.
Foxconn, known formally as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., makes
the bulk of new iPhones at a sprawling factory in Zhengzhou, where
it has hired more than 200,000 workers. The company said a
28-year-old male employee who had worked with Foxconn since October
2010 was found dead outside a building on the Zhengzhou campus
early on Tuesday.
The company is cooperating with law-enforcement authorities to
investigate the incident, Foxconn said in a statement. Apple
couldn't be reached immediately for comment.
The latest incident highlights the difficulties that Foxconn,
the world's largest contract manufacturer, faces in trying to
manage its massive workforce of more than one million in China.
Over the past six years, the Taiwanese company, which assembles
most of Apple's iPhones and iPads, has been under scrutiny for its
labor practices after a spate of suicides and accidents at its
factories in China.
The company has sought to improve working conditions and
implemented suicide-prevention measures following criticism from
labor groups, adding to its labor costs.
Since 2010, Foxconn has raised wages annually at its plants
across China. In 2012, the company opened itself up to audits by
the Fair Labor Association and vowed to limit overtime, improve
safety and set up more independent unions at its factories.
Write to Lorraine Luk at lorraine.luk@wsj.com
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