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30 year old expat dies in Shenzhen, family raising funds to have body repatriated

Posted: 10/12/2012 2:06 pm

The family of Ryan Gibson, who died in Shenzhen Sept. 24 according to his obituary, has launched a fundraising campaign to repatriate his remains.

The family has so far raised just under half of the $8,000 CAD (51,294 RMB) required to bring him home to Victoria, British Columbia, according to the web page they are using for the campaign.

Gibson was described by one friend who donated $50 CAD as “an incredible and kind man with a contagious laugh.” Dozens of others echoed the sentiment. One friend told us that he used his experience as a writer to good effect when teaching English in China, saying “He was one of the most talented writers I have known.”

It has been alleged that Gibson jumped off a balcony and was in a troubled marriage. “I can’t believe it,” one of his friends told The Nanfang.

If you want to help you can go to this web page.

Haohao

Another suicide at Foxconn? Employee jumps off 9th floor after slitting wrists

Posted: 09/17/2012 3:59 pm

The Foxconn factory in Guanlan

Foxconn, the manufacturer of iDevices, Kindles, Samsung phones, tablets, e-readers and more, is coming under the gun once again after another of its young employees was found dead last Wednesday in Guanlan, very close to Shenzhen.

Reports say the man worked at one of Foxconn’s factories in Shenzhen.  He jumped off the 9th floor of an apartment complex - a private building unrelated to Foxconn - after slitting his wrists, according to IDG News which cited local media.  Other reports confirmed the man died and worked at Foxconn, but it’s not clear that he committed suicide as a result of his work.

Foxconn, which employees hundreds of thousands of people in Shenzhen, has come under fire in recent years after several of its employees committed suicide at its factories. PC World says the company is trying to improve, however:

Earlier this year, Apple announced the Fair Labor Association (FLA) would conduct audits of Foxconn factories, including one at Guanlan, which employs more than 70,000 workers.

In the FLA’s latest audit of Foxconn, the group said the company was steadily making improvements in conditions at its factory. Foxconn has also said the company is committed to worker safety, and has been making changes including raising wages and limiting workers’ overtime.

The company has however recently come under scrutiny for allegedly forcing vocational students to work at its factories, as part of its internship program. Foxconn denies the allegation, and has stated the workers are free to leave the program at anytime.

You can learn more about life in factories in the PRD in the latest edition of Nanfang TV.

 

Haohao

Nanfang TV: “Factory Girls” author interviews Dongguan factory workers

Posted: 09/17/2012 12:58 pm

The iPhone 5 is set to be released in the United States, Hong Kong, and a few other places later this week, and the sparkly new phone is putting renewed focus on conditions inside the Chinese factories where the devices are made.

Leslie T. Chang wrote an excellent book on life inside PRD factories called Factory Girls: From Village to City in a Changing China in 2008, and says workers inside these factories aren’t just toiling to meet the needs of decadent western consumers:

“We, the beneficiaries of globalization seem to exploit these victims with every purchase we make and the injustice feels embedded in the products themselves,” Chang says. “This simple narrative equating Western demand and Chinese suffering is appealing … but it’s also inaccurate and disrespectful. We must be peculiarly self-obsessed to imagine that we have the power to drive tens of millions of people on the other side of the world to migrate and suffer in such terrible ways … By focusing so much on ourselves and our gadgets, we have rendered the individuals on the other ends into invisibility, as tiny and interchangeable as the parts of a mobile phone.”

She argues these employees are also working for a better life for themselves, their families, and their offspring. You can watch one of her talks on the issue below, in the latest edition of Nanfang TV.

Haohao

Woman falls from a 10th floor window after explosion, lands on passerby below

Posted: 08/1/2012 2:17 pm

A gas explosion at a rented appartment killed a woman instantly in Yucui Village, Shenzhen’s Longhua District on the evening of July 30, Southern Metropolis Daily reports.

According to a neighbour, a blast could be heard at about 7:00 pm, then someone shouted “gas explosion!” The whole building shook. When the neighbour went outside, he saw the charred remains of a woman on the ground and also saw that the tenth-floor window from which she had fallen was smashed.

“She was a divorcee who had had a quarrel with her boyfriend. It is very possible that their frequent quarreling was what drove her to commit suicide,” said the neighbour.

Police said the woman was around 30, came from Hunan Province, and worked as a bus conductor. She ignited a gas canister at her home at 6:47 pm.  Police say her unhappy love life was the most likely reason for her suicide. A passer-by was hit by the falling woman and was taken to hospital but had no serious injuries.

One Weibo user asked what is about the modern age that is making people so fragile. Another said it isimpossible to know whether to blame society or to blame the person. Another suggested that this was all simply because women are stupid.

 

Haohao

Pregnant woman commits suicide, family blames hospital

Posted: 07/5/2012 7:00 am

Should a hospital inform a pregnant woman that her baby may be born deformed? At what age is a woman too old to have a baby? Should a hospital be blamed when one of its patients commits suicide? These are among the questions raised by a recent incident in Guangzhou.

A pregnant woman killed herself and her unborn baby after jumping out of a window at the Red Cross hospital in the city’s Baiyun District on July 2, according to local media. The cause is being investigated.

The family of Feng Yanxia, 35, suspect that she had had a nervous breakdown after her doctor repeatedly warned her that the baby may be deformed. The hospital explained that the doctor was simply doing his duty by respecting Feng’s right to know. No doctor had done anything inappropriate, the hospital said. Both parties are trying to figure out what happened.

It is thought that the act was pre-meditated, because Feng ensured that her husband He Zhihong was not around to try to stop her. “She sent me to buy dumplings,” said the husband, “but clearly this was to get me out of the way.”

On the morning of June 2, Feng’s mood appeared to be normal. She lay in room 460 of the hospital with her husband waiting for her daily check-up which was at 9:30 a.m. Around 9 a.m., after telling her husband to buy dumplings, Feng took an elevator up to the seventh floor and jumped out of the nearest window.

After her body was found, Feng was taken to the emergency ward but died at 3:50 in the afternoon. Feng’s husband argued that the only possible reason for the suicide was that she couldn’t bear to have a deformed baby.

In April this year, lumps started to grow all over Feng’s body. She was worried that this might affect her baby. On June 29, she had an examination at the maternity hospital in Haizhu District and was told that she was 34 weeks pregnant, but the foetus was still at the stage of development expected in the 32nd week.

After transferring to the Red Cross Hospital, the husband insisted that his wife rest for a few days and if the situation worsened, transfer to another.

He and Feng are both natives of Baiyun District, and both worked in a clothing factory in the city. They had been happily married for 10 years and their daughter was an outstanding student and the monitor of her class, which is similar to being class president. On the afternoon of June 3, He and his daughter stood at the spot where the mother had been found and wept silently.

Both the family and the hospital will continue to investigate what drove Feng to suicide. An expert told media that the hospital was acting within the law and the ethics of the profession by telling Feng and her husband that there was a possibility of the baby being born deformed. But emphasised that doctors must use their own initiative and show “tact” in dealing with such serious situations.

Netizens have had mixed reactions. With one Weibo user saying, “As a pregnant woman, I think the hospital has behaved shamelessly.” Others said the hospital had done nothing wrong, as they would have run the rick of being sued if they hadn’t told her.

Haohao

11yo girl hangs herself after quarrel with cousin

Posted: 06/14/2012 7:00 am

An 11 year-old girl in Kai Ping Tang Kou Town hanged herself with electrical wire after being criticized by her parents for quarelling with her younger female cousin, Southern Metropolis Daily reports. An official autopsy confirmed the death was a suicide.

While the family has refused to speak to reporters, relatives and neigbours have shed some light on what happened. At approximately 8:00pm, the girl’s parents came home from work and sat down to dinner but when they called their daughter to join them, she did not respond. When they went upstairs to find her, they found their daughter hanging from the ceiling.

According to a neighbour, the daughter was upset that when she turned to her mother for support after the quarrel, her mother scolded her for getting into the argument. Another neighbour claims that the girl, one of three children, would habitually lock herself in her bedroom after arguing with family members: ”Her parents would give her anything she wanted… they spoiled her very much”, said the neighbour.

The number of suicides has risen in the country in recent years, with approximately 287,000 Chinese killing themselves annually, the 9th highest rate in the world according to the World Health Organization. The situation is particularly bad in rural areas, where the suicide rate is three times higher than that of urban centers, and accounts for 75% of China’s total suicides. Perhaps most disconcerting, China’s female suicide rate is 25% higher than the male rate, with Chinese aged 15-34 most likely to kill themselves.

 

 

Haohao

Another worker plummets to his death at Foxconn

Posted: 07/21/2011 9:37 am

The assembly line at Foxconn

Foxconn, the maker of all things Apple, Sony and Nokia among others, has been heavily criticized in recent months for workplace conditions, specifically at its Shenzhen plant in Longhua District. More than a dozen workers jumped from their dorm rooms last year, forcing Foxconn to improve workplace conditions and raise salaries.

But that doesn’t seem to have helped.

The Taipei Times notes that a 21-year old who had only been working at Foxconn for two weeks fell from his dormitory on Tuesday:

The company, meanwhile, has tried to contain the damage from the suspected suicide attempt by contending that the employee’s fall was not a result of work pressure.

Foxconn vice president Terry Cheng (程天縱) attributed the death to a possible accident, saying that the employee had only worked two hours of overtime since he joined the company.

“Based on my preliminary understanding, the employee was not a member of staff on the production line, but he worked in our research department,” Cheng told reporters in Taipei on Tuesday. “The employee was still on a training program and he had worked overtime for only two hours during the past 20 days, so we think that work pressure is irrelevant.”

He said that “prior to the accident, the employee had dined with 20 to 30 colleagues and they were likely drunk.”

Shanghaiist notes that claims of no overtime are spurious at best, considering who Foxconn’s clients are (*cough* Apple *cough*) and how the products it creates are in such high demand. Nonetheless, the series of suicides has not only hurt Foxconn’s reputation, but is one of the catalysts for the company’s move into Western China.

The exact number of deaths at Foxconn over the past two years are hard to pin down, with figures ranging from 13 to 16. You can get more info here.

 

 

Haohao