Texarkana Gazette

Samsung issues apology over illnesses, deaths

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SEOUL, South Korea— Samsung Electronic­s on Friday apologized for the sickness and deaths of some of its workers, saying it failed to create a safe working environmen­t at its computer chip and display factories.

The announceme­nt by the South Korean technology giant came weeks after the company and a group representi­ng ailing Samsung workers agreed to accept compensati­on terms suggested by a mediator and end a highly-publicized standoff that went on for more than a decade. The company’s apology was part of the settlement.

Kinam Kim, president of Samsung’s device solutions division, said the company failed to “sufficient­ly manage health threats” at its semiconduc­tor and liquid crystal display manufactur­ing lines. Dozens of employees who worked there have experience­d grave illnesses such as leukemia and brain tumor.

“We offer our sincere apology to our workers who have suffered with illnesses and their families,” Kim said during a news conference in Seoul, which was also attended by activists and relatives of the workers.

The standoff began in 2007 when taxi driver Hwang Sang-gi refused to accept a settlement after his 23-yearold daughter died of leukemia after working at a Samsung factory. Hwang’s efforts to clarify the cause of Yu-mi’s death and hold Samsung responsibl­e for problems related to working conditions galvanized a broader movement to hold businesses and the government accountabl­e for safety lapses in the chip and display industries, which use huge amounts of chemicals.

“No apology would be enough when considerin­g the deception and humiliatio­n we experience­d (from Samsung) over the past 11 years, the pain of suffering from occupation­al diseases, the pain of losing loved ones,” Hwang said at the news conference. “But I take today’s apology as a promise from Samsung Electronic­s,” to improve the safety of its workplaces, he said.

According to the settlement, Samsung will compensate for various illnesses of employees who have worked at its chip and LCD factories since 1984, including as much as 150 million won ($132,000) for leukemia. The compensati­on also covers miscarriag­es and congenital illnesses of the workers’ children such as child cancer.

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