Apple puts supplier Wistron on notice after Indian factory violence
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[December 19, 2020] By
Sankalp Phartiyal and Chandini Monnappa
NEW DELHI/BENGALURU (Reuters) -Apple Inc
has placed supplier Wistron Corp on probation, saying on Saturday it
would not award the Taiwanese contract manufacturer new business until
it addressed the way workers were treated at its southern India plant.
Early findings of an Apple audit in the wake of violence at the Wistron
plant in India's Karnataka state showed violations of its 'Supplier Code
of Conduct', the Cupertino, California-based tech giant said in a
statement.
Contract workers angry over unpaid wages destroyed property, gear and
iPhones on Dec. 12, causing millions of dollars in losses to Wistron and
forcing it to shut the plant.
Apple said Wistron had failed to implement proper working hour
management processes, which "led to payment delays for some workers in
October and November".
Wistron on Saturday admitted some workers at the plant in Karnataka's
Narasapura had not been paid properly or on time, and it was removing a
top executive overseeing its India business.
Apple said it will continue to monitor Wistron's progress on corrective
action.
"Our main objective is to make sure all the workers are treated with
dignity and respect, and fully compensated promptly," Apple said, adding
that it continued to investigate issues at the plant, which is located
some 50 km outside of the southern tech hub of Bengaluru and assembles
one iPhone model.
"This is a new facility and we recognise that we made mistakes as we
expanded," Wistron said in a statement. "Some of the processes we put in
place to manage labor agencies and payments need to be strengthened and
upgraded."
Wistron said it is re-structuring its teams and setting up 24-hour
hotlines for employees to make anonymous complaints.
"Apple has sent a strong message to its suppliers, telling them
unequivocally that they need to adhere to its standards," Neil Shah of
Hong Kong-based tech researcher Counterpoint said.
"In the long-run it should make suppliers more cautious and likely
create fewer such public-relations headaches for Apple."
MANUFACTURING SETBACK
The Apple probation will delay Wistron's smartphone production and hurt
its manufacturing push in India where it had committed to invest some 13
billion rupees ($177 million) over the next five years as part of New
Delhi's production-linked incentive plan for smartphone manufacturing.
[to top of second column] |
Men wearing protective face masks walk past broken windows of a
facility run by Wistron Corp, a Taiwanese contract manufacturer for
Apple, in Narsapura near the southern city of Bengaluru, India,
December 14, 2020. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
Wistron had plans to make another iPhone model at the Narasapura plant and was
planning to hire up to 20,000 workers in a year's time, a source told Reuters
previously.
But it could not cope with the rapid scaling up of manpower and breached several
laws, Karnataka state officials found after an inspection of the plant following
the violence.
The number of workers rose to 10,500 from the permitted 5,000 in a short span of
time, the Karnataka factories department said in a report, which was reviewed by
Reuters.
"The HR department has not been adequately set up with personnel of sound
knowledge of labour laws," the report of the inspection, which was conducted on
Dec. 13, concluded.
Wistron did respond to emails from Reuters seeking comment on the violations
listed.
Other violations highlighted in the report included underpayment of wages to
contract workers and housekeeping staff, and making female staff work overtime
without legal authorisation.
The findings of this inspection, and another preliminary government audit,
confirm the grievances over unpaid wages and poor attendance recording systems
recounted in interviews to Reuters by at least half a dozen Wistron workers.
The Wistron probation will likely also dent Apple's plans to scale up in India,
a market it has bet on to expand its manufacturing base beyond China.
Apple began the assembly of its first iPhone model in India via Wistron in 2017.
It has now ramped up assembly operations, with Foxconn in southern India and
another top supplier Pegatron is set to begin local operations.
($1 = 73.5700 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Chandini Monnappa in Bengaluru and Sankalp Phartiyal in New
DelhiEditing by Shri Navaratnam and Alexander Smith)
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