Friday, August 9, 2019
China and exploitation
Workers put in well over the legal maximum of 36 hours of overtime a month, with some working an extra 140 hours at peak times
By Beh Lih Yi
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 9 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Amazon pledged on Friday to investigate claims of worker abuse at a factory in China after labour activists said students as young as 17 were put on night shifts and legal overtime limits broken.
Research by New York-based China Labor Watch found the factory, used by manufacturer Foxconn to make the online retail giant's Echo Dot smart speaker and Kindle e-reader, relied on temporary student workers and excessive overtime.
Under Chinese law, factories can hire student interns aged 16 and older, but they are barred from working overtime or night shifts.
Workers put in well over the legal maximum of 36 hours of overtime a month, with some working an extra 140 hours at peak times.
"We are urgently investigating these allegations and addressing this with Foxconn at the most senior level," an Amazon spokesman said in an email to the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"We do not tolerate violations of our Supplier Code of Conduct," he said, adding the company sent investigators to the site this week after it became aware of the claims.
About 20% or one in five workers at the plant in the central Chinese city of Hengyang was a student intern, double the legal limit, according to China Labor Watch.
It was the second time Amazon and its contract manufacturer, Foxconn, came under scrutiny for its treatment of workers at the factory.
Taiwan-based Foxconn, known formally as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, is the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer and employs more than a million people.
Foxconn said it would work to ensure it follows the law on the number of student interns it hires, and not ask them to work excessive hours, though it stressed that all were of legal working age.
"We regularly carry out internal reviews... and a recent review of our operations in Hengyang determined that we were not in full compliance with all relevant laws and regulation," the firm said.
Foxconn, which also makes Apple Inc iPhones, came under fire in 2010 for a spate of suicides at plants in China.
(Reporting by Beh Lih Yi @behlihyi, Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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