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Chinese iPhone, iPad factories inspected

Chinese factories where Apple devices are assembled are undergoing voluntary audits of their working conditions by an independent workers' rights watchdog that the company recently joined.

Apple has faced criticism over worker suicides, illness

Chinese factories where Apple devices are assembled are undergoing voluntary audits of their working conditions by an independent workers' rights watchdog that the company recently joined.

The Fair Labor Association began its first inspections Monday at a facility called Foxconn City in Shenzhen, China. That and other planned inspections are expected to include factories where 90 per cent of Apple devices undergo final assembly, Apple announced in a news release. However,the releasedid not mention factories that manufacture device components.

The FLA describes itself as a non-profit organization dedicated to ending sweatshop conditions in factories worldwide.

Trademark dispute prompts iPad seizures

An official in a city in northern China says authorities there are seizing Apple iPads from retailers due to a trademark dispute with a Chinese company.

The official said Monday that investigators in Shijiazhuang, southwest of Beijing, started seizing iPads last week at the request of a company that filed a complaint with the government accusing Apple Inc. of violating its rights to the iPad name. Shenzhen Proview Technology registered the iPad trademark in China in 2001.

Apple bought rights to the name from a Taiwan company affiliated with Proview but the mainland company says it still has rights to use the name in China.

A Chinese court rejected Apple's claim to the name in China last year.

An Apple spokeswoman in Beijing declined to comment.

Associated Press

Apple has been heavily criticized in recent years for alleged health and safety problems and poor working conditions at Chinese factories that supply and assemble components of devices such as iPhones.

Aspate of suicidesat Foxconn Technology Group factories in 2010 and theillnesses of workers at Wintek Corp., in 2011, which were thought to be caused by exposure to toxic chemicals, both created bad publicity for Apple.

A 2011 report by Chinese environmental groupsranked Apple as the least responsiveamong more than two dozen technology companies to concerns about working conditions at its supplier factories.

AlthoughApple has conducted its own audits of its final assembly factories since 2006, this is the first time it has asked an independent group to inspect the facilities. The audits are voluntary, but Apple said its suppliers have "pledged full co-operation with the FLA, offering unrestricted access to their operations."

The audits will include interviews with employees about working and living conditions, including health and safety, working hours and wages, along with inspections of manufacturing and living areas and examination of employment-related documents.

The findings and recommendations from the first inspections will be posted online in early March.

"The inspections now underway are unprecedented in the electronics industry, both in scale and scope, and we appreciate the FLA agreeing to take the unusual step of identifying the factories in their reports," said Apple CEO Tim Cook in a statement.

The company noted that in January, it became the first technology company admitted to the FLA. Joining the association requires companies to commit to allowing unannounced independent audits and enforcing a special code of conduct in their supplier facilities. Other FLA "participating companies" include Nike, American Eagle Outfitters and Liz Claiborne.

Apple said it has conducted and posted results online of more than 500 factory audits it has conducted throughout its supply chain in the past five years.

Many of the companies that supply and assemble components for Apple devices, such as Foxconn,are also contracted byothertechnology companies, such as Microsoft and Nintendo.