A BBC Panorama investigation of a iPhone 6 production line in
China showed Apple's promises to protect workers were routinely broken.
Exhausted workers were filmed falling asleep on their
12-hour shifts at the Pegatron factories on the outskirts of Shanghai. One
undercover reporter, working in a factory making parts for Apple computers, had
to work 18 days in a row despite repeated requests for a day off.
Another reporter, whose longest shift was 16 hours, said:
"Every time I got back to the dormitories, I wouldn't want to move. Even
if I was hungry I wouldn't want to get up to eat. I just wanted to lie down and
rest. I was unable to sleep at night because of the stress."
Overtime is supposed to be voluntary, but none of the
reporters were offered any choice. In addition to the excessive hours, one
reporter had to attend unpaid meetings before and after work. Another reporter
was housed in a dormitory where 12 workers shared a cramped room.
The poor conditions in Chinese factories were highlighted in
2010 when 14 workers killed themselves at Apple's biggest supplier, Foxconn. Following
the suicides, Apple published a set of standards spelling out how factory
workers should be treated. It also moved some of its production work to
Pegatron's factories on the outskirts of Shanghai. But Panorama's undercover
reporters found that these standards were routinely breached on the factory
floor.
Panorama also travelled further down Apple's supply chain to
the Indonesian island of Bangka. Apple says it is dedicated to the ethical
sourcing of minerals, but the programme found evidence that tin from illegal
mines could be entering its supply chain. It found children digging tin ore out
by hand in extremely dangerous conditions - miners can be buried alive when the
walls of sand or mud collapse.
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