Mass brawl halts production at iPhone factory

The company that makes Apple’s iPhones suspended production at a factory in China today after a brawl involving as many as 2,000 employees at a dormitory injured 40 people.

The fight, the cause of which was under investigation, erupted at a privately-managed dormitory near a Foxconn Technology Group factory in the northern city of Taiyuan, the company and Chinese police said.

A police statement reported by the official Xinhua News Agency said 5,000 officers were dispatched to the scene.

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The Taiwanese-owned company declined to say whether the factory was involved in iPhone production. It said the facility, which employs 79,000 people, would suspend work today and reopen tomorrow.

Foxconn makes iPhones and iPads for Apple and also assembles products for Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard. It is one of China’s biggest employers, with some 1.2m workers in factories in Taiyuan, the southern city of Shenzhen, in Chengdu in the west and in Zhengzhou in central China.

The fight in Taiyuan started at 11pm last night, “drawing a large crowd of spectators and triggering chaos”, a police spokesman was quoted by Xinhua as saying.

Order was restored after four hours and several people were arrested, said the company, a unit of Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. It said 40 people were taken to hospital for treatment.

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The violence did not appear to be work-related, the company and police said. Comments posted on Chinese internet bulletin boards said it might have erupted after a security guard hit an employee.

Photographs posted on microblog service Sina Weibo showed broken windows, a burned vehicle and police with riot helmets, shields and clubs.

The company has faced scrutiny over complaints in the past about wages and working hours. It raised minimum pay and promised in March to limit hours after an auditor hired by Apple found Foxconn employees regularly were required to work more than 60 hours a week.

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