The Star Malaysia

Mass unrest at factory

Protests erupt at largest iphone plant over Covid curbs

- — Agencies

Beijing: Large-scale protests broke out at Foxconn’s vast iphone factory in Zhengzhou, central China, images circulatin­g on Weibo and Twitter showed.

Beijing’s unrelentin­g zero-covid policy has caused fatigue and resentment among wide swathes of the population, some of whom have been locked down for weeks at factories and universiti­es, or unable to travel freely.

In the videos, hundreds of workers can be seen marching on a road in daylight, with some being confronted by riot police and people in hazmat suits.

“Give us our pay!”, chanted workers, some carrying batons, according to footage from one video.

Other footage showed tear gas being deployed and workers taking down quarantine barriers. Some workers had complained they were forced to share dormitorie­s with colleagues who had tested positive for Covid-19.

Several security personnel in protective garb appeared to be kicking a worker lying on a main road in another clip.

Video from a separate livestream showed dozens of workers at night confrontin­g a row of police officers and a police vehicle with flashing lights, shouting: “Defend our rights! Defend our rights!”

As clouds of smoke emanate from the vehicle, the streamer can be heard saying: “They are rushing in! Smoke bombs! Tear gas!”

A clip of the same nighttime protest taken from another angle shows workers setting off fire extinguish­ers towards police just out of frame.

One photo taken during the day showed the charred remains of a gate, apparently burned down during the night.

The Weibo hashtag “Foxconn riots” appeared to be censored by noon yesterday, while some text posts referencin­g large-scale protests at the factory remained live.

Foxconn, also known by its official name Hon Hai Precision Industry, is the world’s biggest contract electronic­s manufactur­er, assembling gadgets for internatio­nal brands.

The Taiwanese tech giant, Apple’s principal subcontrac­tor, recently saw a surge in Covid-19 cases at its Zhengzhou site, leading the company to shutter the vast complex in a bid to keep the virus in check.

Since then, the huge facility of some 200,000 workers – dubbed “iphone City” – has been operating in a “closed loop” bubble.

Footage emerged this month of panicking workers fleeing the site en masse on foot in the wake of allegation­s of poor conditions at the facility, with multiple employees recounting scenes of chaos and disorganis­ation at the complex of workshops and dormitorie­s.

Foxconn said in a statement that it had fulfilled its payment contracts and that reports of infected staff living on campus with new recruits were “untrue”.

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