14.1 C
Delhi
Friday, December 12, 2025

iPhone maker offers payments to get workers

Date:

Share post:

Beijing: Apple supplier Foxconn is ramping up efforts to recruit workers after unrest at the world’s biggest iPhone factory in China.

Employees who successfully refer a friend or family member to work at its plant in Zhengzhou, China, will receive a 1,000 yuan award ($141), BBC reported.

It comes after footage circulated widely online last week showed angry protests at the factory.

Apple has warned that shipments of its new iPhone 14 would be delayed due to Covid restrictions, the report said.

Foxconn employees who refer a new recruit will be paid 500 yuan if the person stays working for the company for 15 days. They will get another 500 yuan if the recruit remains in the role for a month, a post seen by the BBC on the popular messaging app WeChat said.

Last month, Foxconn apologised for a “technical error” in its payment system after protests at the factory in the city of Zhengzhou over Covid restrictions and claims of overdue pay.

The announcement came after videos posted on social media showed hundreds of workers clashing with security staff.

Factory activity in the world’s second largest economy shrank more than expected in November. The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 48, down from 49.2 in October, according to the latest official figures published on Wednesday.

Related articles

The First Spark of the Arpora Fire Was a Panchayat Stamp

The trail of corruption that enabled the illegal operations of Birch nightclub - an illegality that burned 25...

Arpora’s White-Collared Terrorism: Will We Go to War Against Corruption That Kills Our Own?

There are moments in a nation’s journey when the blood spilled on its own soil demands more than...

Arpora Was Not an Accident. It Was Murder – And Goa Must Say It Loudly

Goa woke up to horror in Arpora - 23 lives reduced to ashes inside a nightclub that should...

We Can Indeed Be Home at More Than One Place: ‘Finding Home Again’ Author Richa Sharma

Can tragedy bridge the gulf between despair and acceptance?When a train derails in flood-ravaged Assam, it disrupts the...