Skip to main content

Police, company investigates Foxconn death

By Kevin Voigt, CNN
June 15, 2012 -- Updated 0505 GMT (1305 HKT)
Foxconn says it is committed to ensuring its staff have a safe, satisfactory and healthy working environment.
Foxconn says it is committed to ensuring its staff have a safe, satisfactory and healthy working environment.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Chengdu police are investigating the death of a Foxconn employee
  • Body of the 23-year-old found outside his residence, apparently from a fall
  • Comes after a rash of suicides at the brought scrutiny to the Apple supplier

(CNN) -- Chengdu police are investigating the death of a Foxconn employee, whose body was found outside his residence earlier this week.

The man, whose surname is Xi, fell to his death, according to Chengdu authorities. The death is being reported by Reuters and other news agencies as a suicide, which CNN cannot independently confirm.

"We were informed by local law enforcement authorities in the city of Chengdu that [Wednesday] afternoon, a 23 year-old male Foxconn employee was found dead outside his off-campus residence in Chengdu," Foxconn Technology Group said in a statement.

"Chengdu law enforcement authorities are conducting a thorough investigation into this matter and Foxconn is cooperating with that process. We have extended our condolences to the family of this employee and we are working with the Foxconn Labor Union and others to provide the family with the support they need at this very sad time."

Rare look inside Foxconn factory campus
Audit of Foxconn finds major violations
Foxconn audit shows 'excessive overtime'

Apple and Foxconn -- a major manufacturer of iPhones and iPads -- agreed to improve labor conditions at the Chinese plants earlier this year.

Foxconn, a subsidiary of Taiwan-based electronics supplier Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. -- which also makes electronic goods for Sony, Microsoft, Nokia and other household brands -- came under intense scrutiny by CNN and other media outlets in 2010 after a series of suicides by workers at its Chinese plants raised questions about living and working conditions.

Though Foxconn maintains its workers are treated well, Chairman Terry Gou made an unprecedented public apology in the wake of the suicides. Foxconn then released a statement saying it had introduced counselors, started a 24-hour phone counseling service and opened a stress room where workers can take out their frustration on mannequins with bats.

Apple joined the Fair Labor Association earlier this year -- the first technology company to do so -- and authorized the group to audit Foxconn operations. A March 29 report found several violations, especially regarding excessive work hours of more than 60 hours a week.

Apple and Foxconn have pledged to reduce working hours.

CNN's Paul Armstrong and Corinna Liu contributed to this report

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
Check out CNN's latest news, commentary, photos, and videos on our China special section.
May 16, 2013 -- Updated 0225 GMT (1025 HKT)
This month, "On China" host Kristie Lu Stout speaks to guests about China's contemporary art scene.
May 16, 2013 -- Updated 0107 GMT (0907 HKT)
Who is the world's third biggest smartphone maker? BlackBerry? Guess again. HTC? Nope. It's China's Huawei.
May 8, 2013 -- Updated 1224 GMT (2024 HKT)
CNNGo heads to the capital of China's Sichuan province where numbing peppers rule.
May 9, 2013 -- Updated 0016 GMT (0816 HKT)
The poisoning of Zhu Ling, a college sophomore in Beijing almost two decades ago, has ignited an emotional debate in China.
May 7, 2013 -- Updated 2253 GMT (0653 HKT)
80-year-old Chinese war veteran Duan Keke fought for North Korea in the Korean War. He believes China will prevent war with North Korea.
May 3, 2013 -- Updated 0654 GMT (1454 HKT)
"Iron Man 3" has set a new box office record in China, taking 130 million yuan ($21 million) on its opening day.
May 1, 2013 -- Updated 0259 GMT (1059 HKT)
The Communist party has become an exclusive club for China's elite, and some say its youngest members are motivated by nothing more than naked careerism.
April 26, 2013 -- Updated 1114 GMT (1914 HKT)
The H7N9 strain responsible for the bird flu outbreak in China is unlike any that has previously been seen in this type of virus.
Share with us your photos and videos of life in China-- the everyday China. The best content could be featured online or on air.
ADVERTISEMENT