In Chinese Factories, Lost Fingers and Low Pay
Pushing to keep big
corporations honest, labor groups regularly smuggle photographs, videos, pay
stubs, shipping records and other evidence out of factories that they say
violate local law and international worker standards. In 2007, factories that
supplied more than a dozen corporations, including Wal-Mart, Disney and Dell, were accused of unfair labor practices,
including using child labor, forcing employees to work 16-hour days on
fast-moving assembly lines, and paying workers less than minimum wage. (Minimum
wage in this part of China
is about 55 cents an hour.)
In recent weeks, a flood of reports detailing labor abuse have been released,
at a time when China is still coping with last year’s wave of product safety
recalls of goods made in China, and as it tries to change workplace rules with
a new labor law that took effect on Jan. 1.
No company has come under as harsh a spotlight as Wal-Mart, the world’s biggest
retailer, which sourced about $9 billion in goods from China in 2006,
everything from hammers and toys to high-definition televisions. In December,
two NGOs, documented what they said were abuse and labor violations at 15
factories that produce or supply goods for Wal-Mart — including the use of
child labor at Huanya Gifts, a factory here in Guangzhou that makes Christmas tree
ornaments. To read the entire article, please click here
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