Samsung
halts business with supplier in China on child labor concern
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[July 14, 2014] By
Se Young Lee SEOUL
(Reuters) - Samsung Electronics Co Ltd said it halted business with
a supplier in China over suspected use of child workers, the first
time it has taken such a step, after criticism that its monitoring
of labor practices at suppliers was inadequate. |
The decision, announced on Monday, comes less than a week after
U.S.-based China Labor Watch said it found "at least five child
workers" without contracts at the supplier and called Samsung's
monitoring process to halt such practices "ineffective."
Samsung, the world's biggest smartphone maker, said it conducted
three audits since 2013 of the supplier, a wholly owned subsidiary
of South Korea's Shinyang Engineering Co Ltd, the latest of which
ended on June 25.
But another investigation prompted by the watchdog's report led to
evidence of what Samsung called suspected child labor, pointing to
holes in the tech giant's ability to enforce its labour guidelines
for Chinese suppliers.
"The Chinese authorities are also looking into the case," Samsung
said in its statement on Monday.
It said it would permanently cut all ties with the supplier if the
allegations were true, in line with its zero-tolerance policy on
child workers.
Dongguan Shinyang Electronics and Shinyang Engineering could not be
reached for comment despite multiple attempts to contact them by
phone on Monday.
LABOR PROBLEMS PERSIST
Labour practices at Samsung suppliers have come under scrutiny since
2012, when China Labor Watch said seven children younger than 16
were working for one of the electronics giant's China-based
suppliers.
Chinese labour law forbids hiring workers under 16.
The South Korean firm later said it found no evidence of child
labour following those accusations, although acknowledging other
problems including overtime hours in excess of regulations.
In November 2012, Samsung established a code of conduct for
suppliers in line with standards set by the Electronic Industry
Citizenship Coalition. It also asked suppliers to sign a compliance
agreement to prevent child labour.
Samsung also demands that suppliers adopt a strict hiring process
that includes face-to-face interviews and the use of scanners to
detect fake IDs to ensure no child labourers are employed. In its
annual sustainability report, published on June 30, the firm said a
third-party audit of 100 Chinese suppliers found no instances of
child labor.
The report cited other problems, however, with minors of legal
working age but 18 or younger found working with chemical handling
processes at 48 suppliers and a majority of suppliers not complying
with China's laws on overtime.
Samsung said it demanded immediate action to correct such behaviour.
But China Labor Watch Executive Director Li Qiang said last week
that Samsung's social responsibility reports were an "advertisement"
and that its efforts so far had failed to bring improvements for
workers.
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"What Samsung says is not important; what's important is their
actions," Li said.
The watchdog's report says the child workers it found working at
Dongguan Shinyang were being paid about two-thirds of what adult
employees would be paid in weekly wages despite doing the same work.
The child workers also had trouble eating proper food at the factory
cafeteria due to their night shift hours.
It reported that some of the child workers at Dongguan Shinyang said
the supplier's personnel did not follow a mandated facial
recognition system meant to verify whether the applicant's face
matched the ID provided.
The use of child labour isn't rare in China. Other multinational
tech companies including Apple Inc have been plagued by revelations
of exploitation.
Underage workers have previously been discovered at Foxconn, the
trading name of Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision Industry and the supplier
for some of the world's biggest tech brands.
Samsung declined to comment on details of its investigation and
whether confirmation of use of child labor would affect its existing
relationship with parent Shinyang Engineering, which is also a
Samsung supplier.
"Samsung will strengthen its hiring process not only at its
production facilities but also at its suppliers to prevent such
(cases) from reoccurring," the company said.
Chung Sun-sup, chief executive of corporate monitoring company
Chaebul.com, said Samsung appeared to be growing more proactive in
dealing with allegations of impropriety in response to growing
scrutiny of corporate practices in South Korea.
"In the past allegations of corporate wrongdoing may have been
overlooked if authorities didn't spot them, but now such issues will
emerge in some shape or form," he said.
(Editing by Stephen Coates and Tony Munroe)
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