Apple under fire for factory conditions as iPhone launched
Apple under fire for factory conditions as iPhone
launched
5 hours ago
Hong Kong (AFP) - A labour rights group marked the launch
of Apple's latest iPhone Friday with a report accusing one of the smartphone
giant's Chinese suppliers of exploiting factory workers.
Hong Kong-based Students and Scholars Against Corporate
Misbehaviour (SACOM) say Lens Technology, which makes touchscreen glass, used
forced overtime, withheld wages and risked workers' health after a months-long
investigation into three of its factories.
Company founder Zhou Qunfei, herself a former factory
worker, became China's richest woman after Lens Technology's debut on the
Shenzhen stock exchange in March.
As the iPhone 6s went on sale in markets including Hong
Kong, Japan and mainland China on Friday, SACOM called for Apple to "apply
immediate measures to rectify exploitations in its supply chain".
"We urge Apple Inc. to fulfil its corporate
responsibility... to give workers a workplace with dignity and respect,"
it said in a statement.
The rights group's allegations include workers going for
a month without a day off, wages being withheld for weeks and that the company
failed to pay social security.
"Dust, noise, polluted water and chemical substances
are common problems on the shop floor," it added, with management
"ignoring if workers were well-protected".
It sent undercover workers into factories, as well as
interviewing workers off-site.
SACOM was due to deliver its new report on Friday to
Apple and Lens Technology, based in the southern Chinese province of Hunan.
Around 10 protesters gathered outside one of Apple's
largest stores in Hong Kong Friday morning, holding giant phones with the
slogan "Throw Away The Bad Apple".
But the hundreds of customers who had pre-ordered one of
the new phones were largely oblivious.
"I think bad conditions happen to all brands,"
said James Leung, 30, who was waiting to pick up a rose-gold phone for his
wife, which he said cost him HK$5,000 ($645).
"For me, I need a phone, so I'll get a new phone."
Lens Technology also supplies Samsung and other leading
tech firms. It primarily makes touch-sensitive glass covers for mobile phones,
computers and cameras.
SACOM spokeswoman Liang Pui-kwan said the group was not
only targeting Apple.
"But Apple is the richest and has the biggest
ability to make change and bring the industry forward," she said.
"We're trying to bring the facts in front of people
and let them know what they are choosing."
Lens Technology and Apple were not immediately available
for comment.
Earlier this year a SACOM investigation prompted Japanese
clothing giant Uniqlo to promise to improve working conditions at its Chinese
suppliers after claims the firms were putting employees at risk.
The report accused Uniqlo of buying from two suppliers in
China's southern Guangdong province that made employees work long hours for low
pay in unsafe conditions.
The iPhone 6S features a new "3D Touch" feature
that allows users to differentiate between a light touch and a harder tap, with
the phone reacting differently to each.
It also includes high-resolution 4K video shooting.
In Asia-Pacific, the phone was launched in Australia,
China, Hong Kong, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore on Friday.
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