tech companies

Workers riot at India iPhone factory over ‘exploitation’ claims

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Workers riot at India iPhone factory over ‘exploitation’ claims

WISTRON. People exit from the gate of Wistron, a Taiwanese-run iPhone factory at Narsapura, about 60 km from Bangalore on December 13, 2020.

Photo by Manjunath Kiran/AFP

The riot occurs at Wistron Infocomm Manufacturing's facility on the outskirts of Bangalore, India's IT hub

Authorities vowed to crack down on workers who went on a violent rampage at a Taiwanese-run iPhone factory in southern India over allegations of unpaid wages and exploitation, with 100 people arrested so far.

The workers rioted on Saturday, December 12, at Wistron Infocomm Manufacturing’s facility on the outskirts of Bangalore, India’s IT hub, with videos of the violence showing glass panels smashed with rods and cars flipped on their side.

CCTV cameras, fans and lights were torn down, while a car was set on fire, footage shared on social media showed.

Local media reported workers saying they had not been paid for up to 4 months and were being forced to do extra shifts.

“The situation is under control now. We have formed special teams to investigate the incident,” local police told AFP on Sunday, adding no-one was injured.

The deputy chief minister of Karnataka state, C.N. Ashwathnarayan, called the violence “wanton” and said his government would ensure that the situation is “resolved expeditiously”.

“We will ensure that all workers’ rights are duly protected and all their dues are cleared,” he tweeted Saturday.

Wistron in Taiwan told AFP that “the incident was caused by people of unknown identities from outside who intruded into and damaged its facility with unclear intentions”.

The company added in the statement in Chinese that it “pledged to follow local labor (laws) and other related regulations” to resume operations as soon as possible.

A local trade union leader alleged that there was “brutal exploitation” of factory workers in sweatshop conditions at the iPhone manufacturing plant.

“The state government has allowed the company to flout the basic rights,” Satyanand, who uses one name, told The Hindu newspaper.

The factory employs some 15,000 workers, although a majority of them are contracted via staffing firms, according to local media.

Labor unrest is not uncommon in India, with workers paid poorly and given few or no social security benefits.

A sizeable number of manufacturing plants are part of the informal sector, which employs 90% of the vast nation’s workforce.

Parliament in September passed updated labor laws that the national government said would strengthen their rights, but labor activists say the new legislation makes it harder for workers to strike. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!