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Poisoned Apple?

Foxconn, the Taiwanese giant and a major manufacturer for the US based Apple Corp, has a problem.  Employees keep dying or trying to commit suicide.  In the latest case on April 6 an eighteen year old worker surnamed Rao leaped from her seventh floor accommodation at the company’s factory in Guanlan, Shenzhen, at about 3:20 pm following an altercation with her boyfriend, Foxconn spokesman Liu Kun told China Daily.   The incident comes eight days after a 23 year old worker fell from a 14th floor of the dormitory building at the same factory.  Liu said Foxconn is providing psychological counseling to its near 400,000 workforce in Shenzhen.  It seems like more than counseling is required.  The Times Online reported in July 2009 that a Foxconn employee committed suicide after losing a prototype iPhone.  The factory worker leapt to his death after allegedly being beaten by security guards. (more…)

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‘Damning’ the river

Beijing has admitted to New Delhi that the mainland is building a dam on the Yarlung Zangbo River near its disputed border with India (South China Morning Post, April 24).  The river originates in Tibet and flows into India.  Mainland experts in the project confirmed the hydropower plan for the river yesterday and said that four dams would be built between Sangri and Jiacha counties.  The total power capacity for the dams would be bigger than that of the Three Gorges Dam.  Power from the dams will be used to meet growing demand in Hong Kong and Guangdong.  The first dam lies Southeast of Lhasa at an altitude of 3,260 meters.  The damming of the Yarlung Zangbo, the highest major river in the world, will also give Beijing direct control of the water supply to more than 90,000 square km of land over which China claims sovereignty but which is under control of India.  Chinese officials told India that Beijing had no obligation to reveal its plan to New Delhi but did so to build trust and ease tensions.  Beijing said the hydropower plants would not affect waters into India. (more…)

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Repercussions of Rio Tinto

Four employees of the British-Australian company Rio Tinto have been given jail sentences for bribery and stealing commercial secrets by Shanghai’s No. 1 People’s Court on March 24 2010.  Australian National, Hu received ten years, and three Chinese colleagues received jail sentences of fourteen, eight and seven years. During the three day trial all four men pleaded guilty to accepting bribes but disputed the $13M they were charged in taking as kickbacks.  Mining giant Rio Tinto stood by its employees for many months, but immediately reacted to the verdict by firing all four of them. (more…)

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Google exits mainland China

On March 23, 2010 Google redirected traffic from its Beijing based search engine to its service in HK.  The move effectively means that Google no longer needs to filter its search results as required by Chinese law.  Google offices have closed in Mainland China.  Five years ago Google, China had a savvy CEO from Taiwan who knew how to tread the line between US shareholders and Chinese censors.  He left to set up his own venture. (more…)

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Graduate unemployment rises

Unemployment in China is currently estimated at 9.4% (China Daily March 5, 2010).  Since the global recession in 2008, the nature of employment in China has changed.  There are fewer trading jobs with the rest of the world.  Instead employers are seeking higher skilled graduates with commercial acumen.  6.11 million students graduated from Chinese colleges in 2009.  Officially 87% received jobs but this percentage may be optimistic. Unemployment for graduates is high.  Expectations of a decent lifestyle by younger people means that they will not accept the menial jobs undertaken by their parents.   Unemployment is an issue all over China, but the issue is particularly acute in the cities which formally depended on manufacturing for export. (more…)

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115 miners were rescued from a flooded mine after spending a week underground.  Thirty-eight remain trapped – now assumed dead.  There was extensive press coverage of the rescue work on the front pages of papers this week.  Two thirds of electricity in China is generated by coal.  The rapid rate of urbanisation is creating pressure for more electricity.  In 1980, 191 million people lived in cities in China compared to 595 million by 2007.  In 1949 China had 69 cities.  In 2007 the number of cities had grown to 670.  6,000 people die on average per year in Chinese mines. (more…)

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A man alleged to be mentally ill stabbed eight children to death and injured five others on March 23 in Nanping, Fujian.  He was a doctor who had lost his job and was experiencing difficulty finding a girlfriend.  He shouted at the children as he killed them saying ‘you won’t let me live’.  He has since been given the death sentence.   (more…)

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