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Taipei (AFP) Feb 16, 2011 Apple said its contractor, Taiwan high-tech firm Foxconn, has "saved lives" with a suicide prevention programme established after a number of workers killed themselves at plants in China. In the 2011 Progress Report, Apple said it had sent a team of experts to Foxconn's plant in Shenzhen, southern China, last year to investigate the suicides and evaluate the company's response. "The team commended Foxconn for taking quick action on several fronts simultaneously... the investigation found that Foxconn's response had definitely saved lives," said the report which was released this week. Foxconn adopted a number of preventative measures, including hiring a large number of psychological counselors, establishing a 24-hour care center, and attaching large nets to its factory buildings to prevent impulsive suicides, it said. Foxconn is also implementing an employee assistance programme that focuses on maintaining employee mental health and expanding social support networks, according to the report. "Apple will continue to work with Foxconn through the implementation of these programs, and we plan to take key learnings from this engagement to other facilities in our supply base," it said. At least 13 employees at Foxconn -- the world's largest maker of computer components which produces goods for Apple, Sony and Nokia -- died in apparent suicides last year, China's official Global Times reported. Labour rights activists have blamed the string of deaths on tough working conditions, highlighting the difficulties millions of factory workers face across China.
earlier related report The Taiwanese firm forged a technology cooperation and supply agreement with the South Korean tech giant on Tuesday, according to a statement posted on the website of the Taiwan Stock Exchange. Sintek did not disclose the investment value, nor did it say how much Samsung would spend on the project, but the Taipei-based Commercial Times reported the plant will cost Tw$20 billion ($680 million). The statement said Sintek will set up a display plant, and from the fourth quarter of this year it will start supplying its South Korean partner with touch-screens and related products using a new technology called AMOLED. The technology consumes significantly less power and produces higher resolution images, so it is expected to be widely used in future portable electronics where power consumption is critical to battery life, analysts say. "Samsung must have seen the great potential and realised that it cannot possibly meet the anticipated vast demand on its own," Kuo Ming-chi of Concord Securities told AFP. For the time being, demand comes mainly from producers of smartphones, but it will surge if the technology also begins to be widely used in tablet computers, he said. Samsung, already operating one plant of its kind, plans to add two more before the end of next year, Kuo said.
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