Advertisement

HindustanTimes Wed,19 Jun 2013
RssFeed

Business Computing

Advertisement
Samsung to make on-site inspections on Chinese suppliers
IANS
September 04, 2012
First Published: 13:19 IST(4/9/2012)
Last Updated: 13:28 IST(4/9/2012)
Share more.
 comments   
People walk at the main office building of Samsung Electronics in Seoul. Credit: Reuters/Kim Hong-Ji
South Korean tech behemoth Samsung Electronics Tuesday said it will make on-site inspections on all 105 suppliers in China by the end of September as part of efforts to ensure whether the suppliers are complying with applicable labour laws and Samsung's employment right policies.

According to an e-mailed statement, Samsung planned to complete on-site inspections by the end of this month for all 105 suppliers in China who manufacture products only for Samsung.

An inspection team consisting of around 100 Samsung employees will be dispatched from Samsung headquarters in Seoul to China, reported Xinhua.

Samsung also planned to review 144 more suppliers in China, which make products for Samsung and other firms, via documentation by the end of this year to determine if they require any additional on-site inspection.

The pledge came after China Labor Watch, the New York-based labor rights group, alleged earlier last month that HEG Electronics, a Huizhou, Guangdong province-based Samsung supplier, had employed children under the age of 16, violating a labour law.

According to a field audit made last month by Samsung into working conditions at the HEG Electronics facilities, there was no underage worker there. Samsung inspectors identified workers under the age of 18 on site, but they were student workers or interns over the age of 16, whose presence is legal in China.

Earlier last month, authorities in south China's Guangdong province confirmed that they found no labour law violations in the Chinese Samsung supplier.
 
However, Samsung said that the audit into the HEG Electronics identified several inadequate management and potentially unsafe practices. A system of fines for lateness and absence, which had been banned in China in 2008, was spotted to be in operation at the supplier, Samsung said, adding that it demanded HEG abolish inappropriate and unlawful HR policies.

At HEG, access to first aid material and a medical clinic was inadequate and did not meet local regulations, Samsung said, noting that it demanded HEG establish an on-site medical clinic and provide adequate first aid provisions.

It was confirmed that many HEG employees were found to be exceeding the legal limit of overtime, so Samsung demanded that HEG create compliance plans and systems for observance of court-dictated overtime regulations be put in place.


Share more.
 comments   

comment Note: By posting your comments here you agree to the terms and conditions of www.hindustantimes.com
blog comments powered by Disqus

Advertisement
YouTube says the battle with TV is already over
In a flashy presentation to advertisers Wednesday night, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt declined to forecast that Internet video will displace television watching.
Skylanders: Cloud Patrol arrives on App Store
The incentive to build up a collection of Skylanders toys is as integral as ever -- players plop in a figure's code to see it unlock as an additional character within the iPhone or iPad game.
more »
How Flipkart broke India's online shopping inertia
It was meant to be a portal that compared different e-commerce websites, only there weren't enough of them in the first place to be compared. Thus was born Flipkart, making sure that online shopping would never be the same again in India.
70 pc students use smartphones
About 70 per cent students today own smartphones with a larger user base in smaller cities than the metropolitan cities, according to a survey by software services firm TCS.
more »
Advertisement
Advertisement
Copyright © 2013 HT Media Limited. All Rights Reserved