sourceA 25-year-old man who may have been tortured for losing a new iPhone prototype has committed suicide. Foxconn employee Sun Danyong reportedly jumped from a 12-story building in China after he was allegedly subjected to "unbearable interrogation techniques," including solitary confinement and beatings.
According to AppleInsider, the section chief of the Central Security division has admitted that officers may have used "inappropriate interrogation methods" such as searching Sun's house, holding Sun in solitary confinement and "possibly" beatings.
However, Central Security personnel insist that it was "unlikely" that Sun was beaten. Nevertheless, Foxconn has issued an apology, noting that the incident was an example of the company's "internal management deficiencies."
Club Cupertino has responded to the tragic incident by insisting that it required suppliers to treat all workers with "dignity" and respect.
"We are saddened by the tragic loss of this young employee, and we are awaiting results of the investigations into his death," Apple spokeswoman Kristin Huguet told CNET.
It should be noted that Apple was recently criticized for not ensuring valid overtime rates at 45 of the 83 overseas factories manufacturing iPhones. In addition, 23 of the factories had reportedly refused to follow China's minimum wage laws.
It would sux if it was the only prototype of it's kind; I wouldn't say he was head-over-heels of the new iPhone.
More Details Appear
detailsThis Chinese story is full of crazy twists
Apple is apparently hard at work cooking up what will become the successor to the iPhone 3G S. In China, an army of parts designers are working on the phone's circuit boards and components. Leading them is Foxconn in Shenzhen, a city in the industry-heavy Guangdong province near Hong Kong.
At Foxconn, a 25-year-old college graduate working in product communications, Yong Sun Dan, was in charge of the phone's prototypes. On Thursday, July 9, he set out to pick up 16 prototype units from the factory. He would later discover that one was missing according to DigitalBeat. His theory was that he left it at the factory. On Monday, July 13 he unhappily reported it to his boss.
Two days later, three Foxconn employees broke into his apartment and searched it. Sun, according to an IM exchange, also may have been detained and physically abused during the search.
The story came to an end of Thursday at 3 a.m. when Yong Sun Dan leapt from the window of his apartment building to his death. The tragic story showcases the potentially deadly game of intrigue and leaks that blog sites play. On the other side of the aisle, it shows the tremendous pressure that manufacturers like Foxconn feel about defending the secrecy of its star products.
Steven Lin, a Chinese blogger and marketer, perhaps sums it up best, writing:
Students [like Sun] have been studying in schools for years, and they have been carefully protected by their parents. They can’t endure such pressure - ‘their house being illegally searched,’ or ‘house arrests’ (if that’s true, according some reports news). Employees at these and other factories sometimes kill themselves simply because of the pressure from their daily jobs — you know what’s going to happen when they face more serious threats. Also, most young Chinese guys don’t have friends who are lawyers, so they don’t know how to protect themselves in the legal system. They won’t even look for help from the legal system. They will just endure the pressure, and finally find an extreme way to end all their troubles.
The security division at Foxconn -- the so-called Gu Central Security Division -- has been suspended without pay. Foxconn Technology Group chief executive, general manager of business and Li Jinming has personally apologized as well to the loved ones of the deceased and says the death greatly distressed him.
In the end, the mysterious death of Sun stands out as a shocking story, even in a country that publicly executed its quality control minister for accepting bribes and allowing contaminated antibiotics onto the market a mere year ago. Was the foul play greater than it seemed? What really happened to the phone? We may never know, but the story will hopefully pressure China's tech industry to reform its ways.
I concur with the Chinese Blogger, Stevn Lin. We hired college students to develope a proprietary software. The software was mediocre at best and one by one they started to quit because they could not handle the pressure. Upper-Management made things worse by cuddling these panties waste then pulled the rug out from underneath em.
Last edited by loubot (2009-07-22 05:17:26)