Foxconn India iPhone plant extends closure, workers' hostels inspected -
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[December 27, 2021] By
Sudarshan Varadhan
CHENNAI (Reuters) - A Foxconn iPhone
factory in India at the centre of a mass food-poisoning incident will
extend a week-long closure by an extra three days, a senior official for
the state of Tamil Nadu told Reuters.
The factory, which employs some 17,000 people, had been due to resume
some operations on Monday but is now expected to restart production with
1,000 workers on Thursday, the official said, adding that the state
government had conducted inspections of workers' hostels.
Last week, protests erupted after more than 250 women who work at the
plant and live in one of the hostels had to be treated for food
poisoning. Some of the protestors were rounded up by the police but
later released.
The incident has thrown a spotlight on living conditions for the workers
- most of them women - who reside in hostels near the factory which is
located in the southern city of Chennai.
The Taiwanese contract manufacturer for Apple Inc and other big tech
names as well as 11 of its contractors including those who provide food
and living facilities were summoned for a meeting, said the official.
The official was not authorised to speak on the matter and declined to
be identified.
The state government asked Foxconn to review services provided to the
workers including power backup at the hostels, food and water, and the
Directorate Of Industrial Safety And Health also recommended providing
recreational facilities such as a TV, a library and indoor games, the
official added.
According to a separate government source, Foxconn has told state
bureaucrats it had "ramped up production too quickly" and would
gradually ensure that workers' facilities were upgraded before they go
back to full capacity.
Representatives for Foxconn and Apple were not immediately available for
comment.
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Men ride their motorbikes past a closed plant of Foxconn India unit,
which makes iPhones for Apple Inc, near Chennai, India, December 21,
2021. REUTERS/Sudarshan Varadhan
The gates of the factory, which is on the outskirts of the southern city of
Chennai, were open on Monday morning and some vehicles were moving in and out
but the area was mostly deserted.
The impact on Apple from the closure of the plant, which makes iPhone 12 models
and has started trial production of the iPhone 13, is expected to be minimal,
analysts have said. But the factory is strategic in the long term as Apple tries
to cut its reliance on China's supply chain amid trade tensions between
Washington and Beijing.
The disruption comes as Apple is dealing with pandemic-related supply chain
bottlenecks that have hit production. In October, the company warned that the
impact of these supply chain problems would worsen during the holiday quarter.
The unrest at Foxconn is the second such involving an Apple supplier factory in
India in a year. In December 2020, thousands of contract workers at a factory
owned by Wistron Corp destroyed equipment and vehicles over the alleged
non-payment of wages, causing damages estimated at $60 million.
Cupertino, California-headquartered Apple has bet big on India since it began
iPhone assembly in the country in 2017. Foxconn, Wistron and another supplier,
Pegatron, have together committed roughly $900 million over five years to make
iPhones in India.
(Reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan in Chennai, Additional reporting by Chandini
Monnappa; Writing by Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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