The Prague Post - Violent protests at largest iPhone factory in China

EUR -
AED 4.29965
AFN 72.587313
ALL 95.299386
AMD 434.649893
ANG 2.09554
AOA 1074.765169
ARS 1629.856375
AUD 1.638813
AWG 2.107383
AZN 1.988227
BAM 1.953328
BBD 2.35422
BDT 143.418485
BGN 1.952961
BHD 0.441841
BIF 3476.799647
BMD 1.170768
BND 1.49311
BOB 8.076778
BRL 5.833584
BSD 1.168821
BTN 110.100653
BWP 15.831963
BYN 3.311109
BYR 22947.057443
BZD 2.350825
CAD 1.601289
CDF 2710.328212
CHF 0.920593
CLF 0.026672
CLP 1049.721891
CNY 8.003718
CNH 8.004719
COP 4161.472283
CRC 531.926776
CUC 1.170768
CUP 31.025358
CVE 110.125621
CZK 24.357823
DJF 208.146563
DKK 7.472984
DOP 69.631872
DZD 154.96587
EGP 61.625843
ERN 17.561524
ETB 180.694907
FJD 2.581134
FKP 0.865173
GBP 0.866398
GEL 3.137498
GGP 0.865173
GHS 12.976576
GIP 0.865173
GMD 86.04904
GNF 10260.014585
GTQ 8.935691
GYD 244.540501
HKD 9.172612
HNL 31.05969
HRK 7.534944
HTG 153.026325
HUF 365.226421
IDR 20199.264391
ILS 3.495972
IMP 0.865173
INR 110.34555
IQD 1531.16211
IRR 1541901.768196
ISK 143.793552
JEP 0.865173
JMD 184.456546
JOD 0.830092
JPY 186.777342
KES 151.134398
KGS 102.328898
KHR 4683.072345
KMF 491.722462
KPW 1053.691368
KRW 1728.932355
KWD 0.360315
KYD 0.974067
KZT 542.952821
LAK 25612.583864
LBP 104670.126015
LKR 372.578452
LRD 214.478549
LSL 19.436301
LTL 3.456974
LVL 0.708186
LYD 7.416613
MAD 10.814313
MDL 20.326274
MGA 4856.853006
MKD 61.562085
MMK 2458.858103
MNT 4187.990537
MOP 9.432562
MRU 46.650957
MUR 54.827352
MVR 18.088728
MWK 2026.834771
MXN 20.388519
MYR 4.640938
MZN 74.823505
NAD 19.436301
NGN 1583.077537
NIO 43.015558
NOK 10.907562
NPR 176.161045
NZD 1.993894
OMR 0.449751
PAB 1.168821
PEN 4.052571
PGK 5.073579
PHP 70.983643
PKR 325.845
PLN 4.244492
PYG 7411.619608
QAR 4.260907
RON 5.085705
RSD 117.271577
RUB 88.240244
RWF 1708.437744
SAR 4.391315
SBD 9.41919
SCR 17.325073
SDG 703.045006
SEK 10.823571
SGD 1.494977
SHP 0.874097
SLE 28.830173
SLL 24550.420054
SOS 667.954614
SRD 43.861078
STD 24232.538731
STN 24.469031
SVC 10.227056
SYP 129.399145
SZL 19.428411
THB 37.956042
TJS 10.987194
TMT 4.103543
TND 3.41318
TOP 2.818929
TRY 52.717307
TTD 7.937953
TWD 36.87105
TZS 3041.94971
UAH 51.505213
UGX 4348.496399
USD 1.170768
UYU 46.301399
UZS 14043.226427
VES 565.673837
VND 30861.450724
VUV 137.633919
WST 3.194449
XAF 655.127848
XAG 0.01562
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.164059
XCG 2.106534
XDR 0.814769
XOF 655.127848
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.403266
ZAR 19.406361
ZMK 10538.31988
ZMW 22.120004
ZWL 376.986895
  • BCC

    0.3300

    84.15

    +0.39%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.42

    +0.53%

  • RBGPF

    64.0000

    64

    +100%

  • BTI

    0.8100

    58.09

    +1.39%

  • GSK

    -1.1900

    54.44

    -2.19%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    23.88

    -0.92%

  • RIO

    0.7600

    99.61

    +0.76%

  • AZN

    -2.5500

    189.75

    -1.34%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    46.25

    -0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.95

    +0.17%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.89

    +0.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.32

    +0.39%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    36.53

    +1.09%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    15.3

    -0.78%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    15.63

    +0.06%

Violent protests at largest iPhone factory in China
Violent protests at largest iPhone factory in China / Photo: © AFP

Violent protests at largest iPhone factory in China

Violent protests have broken out around Foxconn's vast iPhone factory in central China, as workers clashed with security personnel over Covid restrictions at the plant.

Text size:

In videos shared on Weibo and Twitter that AFP has verified, hundreds of workers can be seen marching on a road in daylight, with some being confronted by riot police and people in hazmat suits.

A nightime video showed a man with a bloodied face as someone off-camera says: "They're hitting people, hitting people. Do they have a conscience?"

AFP verified that video partly through geolocation that showed distinctive features, including a building and barricades near staff living quarters on the factory compound.

Another video showed smashed-up Covid-19 testing booths and an overturned vehicle.

In one daytime video, several fire trucks surrounded by police in hazmat suits were parked near residential blocks while a voice on a loudspeaker was heard saying: "All workers please return to their accommodation, do not associate with a small minority of illegal elements."

China's unrelenting zero-Covid policy has caused fatigue and resentment among wide swathes of the population, some of whom have been locked down for weeks at factories and universities, or unable to travel freely.

The Weibo hashtag "Foxconn riots" appeared to be censored by Wednesday noon, but some text posts referencing large-scale protests at the factory remained live.

Neither Foxconn nor Apple responded to AFP requests for comment on the latest unrest.

- Hotbed of unrest -

Foxconn, also known by its official name Hon Hai Precision Industry, is the world's biggest contract electronics manufacturer, assembling gadgets for many international brands.

The Taiwanese tech giant, Apple's principal subcontractor, recently saw a surge in Covid-19 cases at its Zhengzhou site, leading the company to shutter the vast complex in a bid to keep the virus in check.

Since then, the huge facility of about 200,000 workers -- dubbed "iPhone City" -- has been operating in a "closed loop" bubble.

Footage emerged this month of panicking workers fleeing the site en masse on foot in the wake of allegations of poor conditions at the facility.

Multiple employees later recounted to AFP scenes of chaos and disorganisation at the complex of workshops and dormitories.

In the place of the fleeing workers, the firm has offered large bonuses and other incentives for employees who stayed as the local government bussed in fresh labourers in a bid to keep the factory afloat.

Apple this month admitted the lockdown had "temporarily impacted" production ahead of the holiday season at the Zhengzhou factory, the Taiwanese company's crown jewel that churns out iPhones in quantities not seen anywhere else.

Foxconn is China's biggest private sector employer, with over a million people working across the country in about 30 factories and research institutes.

China is the last major economy wedded to a strategy of extinguishing Covid outbreaks as they emerge, imposing lockdowns, mass testing and lengthy quarantines despite the widespread disruption to businesses and international supply chains.

The policy has sparked sporadic protests throughout China, with residents taking to the street in several major Chinese cities to vent their anger against snap lockdowns and business closures.

O.Ruzicka--TPP