Tenth employee dies at iPhone maker

A tenth employee of iPhone-maker Foxconn died yesterday, only hours after the company's chairman promised to make life better…

A tenth employee of iPhone-maker Foxconn died yesterday, only hours after the company's chairman promised to make life better for employees at the sprawling production site in southern China.

The company not give details of the death but China's official Xinhua news agency reported on today an initial police investigation indicated the 23-year-old man from northwest China had taken his life by jumping from a seventh floor dormitory balcony.

The spate of deaths has thrown a spotlight on the labour practices of Foxconn, a unit of Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision Industry, whose clients include Apple, Hewlett Packard and Sony Ericsson.

Apple and other clients have said they are investigating working conditions at Foxconn, which has some 420,000 employees at its base in Shenzhen and has come under fire for its secretive corporate culture.

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Workers live inside the factory complex and churn out products for the world's leading computer and phone companies in round-the-clock shifts.

Taipei-based Hon Hai spokesman Arthur Huang confirmed the tenth death but denied reports on three Taiwan TV stations that another person, a young woman, had also jumped late on Wednesday, surviving with serious injuries.

Just hours before the latest reports, the usually media shy Foxconn Chairman Terry Gou had opened the company's sprawling facilities in Shenzhen to reporters and vowed to take sweeping action to prevent more deaths. Mr Gou made another trip back to the plant today following the Wednesday media tour.

All 10 of the deaths have been of young migrant workers, among the millions who leave the poor hinterlands of China for the boom towns of the south and east coastal areas in search of work and high wages.

Two others have been seriously injured after also jumping from buildings, in incidents that labour groups say expose the harsh working conditions at Foxconn.

Li Ping, secretary general of the Shenzhen municipal government, told a news conference yesterday the pressure of being away from home with little care from society was part of a complex set of factors underpinning the suicides.

He said the government was joining with the police and Foxconn to consider a range of ideas such as building up sports and cultural facilities to improve the living environment, Xinhua reported.

The firm was training about 100 mental health counsellors and installing 1.5 million square metres of nets to stop workers from jumping, Xinhua said. The safety nets will cover nearly all dormitories and factories.

"Although this seems like a dumb measure, at least it could save a life should anyone else fall," Mr Gou was quoted as saying.

Reuters