Austin American-Statesman

Samsung apologizes to sickened workers

Chip maker does not concede its factories are linked to cancer.

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SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA— Samsung Electronic­s Co. apologized and promised compensati­on to chip factory workers who suffered cancers linked to chemical exposure, a rare win for families and activists seven years after the death of a 23-year-old employee from leukemia galvanized a movement to hold the company to account.

Samsung said the apology does not mean it concedes a link between the chemicals used in its chip factories and cancer and other diseases. Still, the company’s statement Wednesday that it should have sought a solution sooner is an abrupt shift in Sam- sung’s stance and a form of vindicatio­n for workers and their families.

Samsung vice chairman Kwon Oh-hyun said the company, the world’s largest maker of smartphone­s and memory chips, will compensate workers and their families.

“We feel regret that a solution for this delicate matter has not been found in a timely manner, and we would like to use this opportunit­y to ex- press our sincerest apology to the affected people,” Kwon, who oversees Samsung’s semiconduc­tor and display panel businesses, said in an emailed statement. Local news channels showed Kwon reading the statement before reporters.

Samsung has a major presence in Austin, having created one of the biggest chip man-

ufacturing complexes in North America here, with at least $15 billion in new investment. The company employs about 2,600 people in Central Texas and produces, among other things, advanced low-power processors that are used in mobile devices such as phones and tablets.

Wednesday’s Samsung apology comes a month after opposition party lawmaker Sim Sang-jeung urged the government and Samsung to come up with measures to help victims and prevent workplace diseases. The resolution proposed by Sim in April said 114 of 243 workers sickened since the 1990s were former Samsung semiconduc­tor employees.

For the past few years, Samsung has resisted calls to apologize. The company also provided assistance to a government compensati­on agency in legal battles over the agency’s refusal to pay compensati­on to workers. In South Korea, companies pay levies that the government uses to fund compensati­on for workplace accidents and illnesses.

Courts have ruled in favor of compensati­on in three of about a dozen cases. The government agency, Korea Workers’ Compensati­on and Wel- fare Service, appealed.

Kwon said Samsung will no longer be involved in the lawsuits.

Former Samsung workers, their families and civil groups struggled for years to raise awareness about the cancer cases.

Last year, the story of Hwang Yu-mi, who died at 23 from leukemia in 2007 and her father’s legal battles, was made into a movie funded by donations and brought more attention to the possible link between conditions at Samsung’s older factories and cancers in workers.

Sim, the lawmaker, and SHARP, the advocacy group that helped Hwang’s father and the families of other victims, welcomed Samsung’s apology and urged the company to begin discussion­s about compensati­on.

Samsung watchers say the cancer controvers­y is a sticking point that Lee Kun-hee, Samsung’s chairman and son of the group’s founder, wants to resolve before passing leadership to his own son. Lee, 72, is in a hospital in a stable condition after suffering a heart attack Saturday.

Samsung Electronic­s is a publicly traded company, but its founding family still exerts considerab­le influence through shareholdi­ngs in it and other companies that make up the larger Samsung Group conglomera­te.

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