Workers at the world’s largest iPhone factory in China clash with police
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Workers
at China’s largest iPhone assembly factory were seen confronting police, some
in riot gear, on Wednesday, according to videos shared over social media.
The videos
show hundreds of workers facing off with law enforcement officers, many in
white hazmat suits, on the Foxconn campus in the central Chinese city of
Zhengzhou. In the footage, now blocked, some of the protesters could be heard
complaining about their pay and sanitary conditions.
The scenes
come days after Chinese
state media reported that more than 100,000 people had signed
up to fill positions advertised as part of a massive recruitment drive held for
Foxconn’s Zhengzhou plant.
Apple has
been facing significant supply chain constraints at the assembly facility and
expects iPhone 14 shipments to be hit just as the key holiday shopping season
begins. CNN has contacted the company for comment on the situation at the
plant.
A Covid
outbreak last month had forced the site to lock down, leading some anxious
factory workers to reportedly flee.
Videos of
many people leaving Zhengzhou on foot had gone viral on Chinese social media
earlier in November, forcing Foxconn to step up measures to get its staff back.
To try to limit the fallout, the company said it had quadrupled daily bonuses
for workers at the plant this month.
On
Wednesday, workers were heard in the video saying that Foxconn failed to honor
their promise of an attractive bonus and pay package after they arrived to work
at the plant. Numerous complaints have also been posted anonymously on social
media platforms — accusing Foxconn of having changed the salary packages
previously advertised.
In a
statement in English, Foxconn said Wednesday that “the allowance has always
been fulfilled based on contractual obligation” after some new hires at the
Foxconn campus in Zhengzhou appealed to the company regarding the work
allowance on Tuesday.
Workers were
also heard in the videos complaining about insufficient anti-Covid measures,
saying workers who tested positive were not being separated from the rest of
the workforce.
Foxconn
said in the English statement that speculation online about employees who are
Covid positive living in the dormitories of the Foxconn campus in Zhengzhou is
“patently untrue.”
“Before new
hires move in, the dormitory environment undergoes standard procedures for
disinfection, and it is only after the premise passes government check, that
the new employees are allowed to move in,” Foxconn said.
Searches
for the term “Foxconn” on Chinese social media now yield few results, an
indication of heavy censorship.
“Regarding
violent behaviors, the company will continue to communicate with employees and
the government to prevent similar incidents from happening again,” Foxconn said
in a statement in Chinese.
The
Zhengzhou facility is the world’s largest iPhone assembly site. It typically
accounts for approximately 50% to 60% of Foxconn’s global iPhone assembly
capacity, according to Mirko Woitzik, global director of intelligence solutions
at Everstream, a provider of supply chain risk analytics.
Apple
warned earlier this month of the disruption to its supply chain, saying that
customers will feel an impact.
“We
now expect lower iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max shipments than we
previously anticipated,” the tech giant said in a statement. “Customers will
experience longer wait times to receive their new products.”
As
of last week, the wait time for those models had reached
34 days in the United States, according to a report from UBS.
Public
frustration has been mounting under China’s unrelenting zero-Covid policy,
which continues to involve strict lockdowns and travel restrictions nearly
three years into the pandemic.
Last
week, that sentiment was on display as social media footage showed residents
under lockdown in Guangzhou tearing down barriers meant to confine them to
their homes and taking to the streets in defiance of strictly enforced local
orders.

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