Taiwan iPhone-maker Foxconn suffers another death

Critics say Foxconn employees work under military conditions
Another suspected suicide has occurred at a factory in China, the latest in a string of deaths at the plant this year, state media reports.
Xinhua said the male employee jumped to his death hours after a media tour at the plant owned by Taiwan firm Foxconn.
The firm manufactures mobile phones and electronic equipment for top brands including Dell computers and Apple.
If confirmed, the death would be the twelfth attempted suicide at the plant - two people have survived such falls.
The plant employs more than 400,000 people.
One man was also reported to have killed himself at another Foxconn plant in Hebei province earlier this year.
Apple has said it is "saddened and upset" by the recent string of suicides.
'Determined'
Police officials said the man who died on Wednesday was a 23-year-old from Gansu province, who had been working at the plant for about a year.
Witnesses said he had jumped from the seventh floor of a dormitory building, Xinhua reported.

Mr Gou said the company was trying hard to prevent further deaths
The death came just hours after the chairman of Foxconn, one of Taiwan's most famous businessmen Terry Gou, took reporters around the vast Shenzhen plant.
Mr Gou apologised repeatedly, and said he had trouble sleeping but would not stop trying to solve the problem.
"We need some time," he said. "But we are confident. We are extremely determined."
The company is training counsellors and has provided leisure facilities for the workers. It has also put up nets around the buildings.
"Although this seems like a dumb measure, at least it could save a life should anyone else fall," said Mr Gou.
Labour activists in neighbouring Hong Kong have held small protests, calling for a boycott of iPhones to increase pressure on the factory.
They claim shifts are long, the assembly line moves too fast and that managers enforce military-style discipline on the workforce.
The company points out that despite the bad publicity, each day around 8,000 people still apply to work at the factory.
Apple, whose iPhones are made there, says it will evaluate what Foxconn is doing to address the problems and continue ongoing inspections of the facilities where its products are made.
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