Chinese automaker BYD slams reports of poor conditions at a factory site
in Brazil
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[December 26, 2024] By
ELAINE KURTENBACH
BANGKOK (AP) — A spokesperson for Chinese automaker BYD has objected to
reports about poor conditions at a construction site in Brazil where it
is building a factory, saying the allegations were aimed at “smearing”
China and Chinese brands.
Earlier in the week, a task force led by Brazilian prosecutors said it
had rescued 163 Chinese nationals it said were working in “slavery-like”
conditions at the site. A video from the Labor Prosecutor’s Office of
dorms housing the workers showed beds with no mattresses and rudimentary
cooking facilities.
A BYD spokesperson, Li Yunfei, vehemently objected in a statement posted
Thursday on his Weibo social media site.
“In the matter of smearing Chinese brands, smearing China, and
attempting to undermine the friendship between China and Brazil, we have
seen how relevant foreign forces maliciously associate and deliberately
smear,” it said, also criticizing media reports about the situation.
BYD, which stands for Build Your Dreams, is one of the world’s largest
producers of electric cars. The company said on Monday night that it
would “immediately terminate the contract” with a contractor building
the factory, the Jinjiang Group, and was “studying other appropriate
measures.”
BYD said that the Jinjiang workers would be housed in nearby hotels for
the time being, and would not suffer from the decision to stop work at
the site. The company said that over the past few weeks it had been
changing working conditions at the construction site and had told its
contractors that “adjustments” had to be made.
Li's Weibo post also included what it said was a “declaration” from the
Chinese workers at the site, imprinted with red thumbprints of the men,
who were shown in a video sitting together in a room.
The video showed one of workers reading out a statement saying the
reports of the poor and “slave-like” conditions had violated their human
rights and that the problems were the result of misunderstandings.
“We cherish this work and want to stay and work here,” he said. When he
finished, the workers applauded.
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A model poses near the BYD Song L EV car during Auto China 2024 held
in Beijing, April 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)
Prosecutors said the sanitary
situation at BYD’s site was especially bad, with only one toilet for
every 31 workers, forcing them to wake up at 4 a.m. to line up to be
ready to leave for work at 5:30 a.m.
Under Brazilian law, slavery-like conditions are characterized by
submission to forced labor or exhausting working hours, subjection
to degrading working conditions and restriction of the worker’s
freedom of movement.
Apart from living conditions for the workers, Brazilian officials
said Jinjiang Construction Brazil had confiscated their passports
and withheld 60% of their wages. Those who quit would be forced to
pay the company for their airfare from China, and for their return
ticket, the labor office said in a statement.
The workers’ statement said the passports had been taken to allow
the company to process work permits and other procedures that they
could not manage on their own due to language difficulties.
Jinjiang Construction Brazil said in a statement that it had been
“frequently and intensively inspected by the local labor department
in Brazil.”
It said that due to cultural differences, problems with translation
and understanding, “much of the information released by the labor
department was inaccurate, especially statements saying the Jinjiang
workers were ‘enslaved’ and ‘rescued,’ which is completely
inconsistent with the facts.”
It said its workers were willing to speak with media about the
situation.
Living conditions for migrant construction workers can be quite
spartan in many parts of the developing world, and such labor often
involves contracts that require workers to pay back large sums of
money used to secure the jobs, despite laws prohibiting such
arrangements.
___
AP researcher Yu Bing contributed to this report.
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