You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Lurid Crime Tales-
China Toy Boss Kills Self After Recall
2007-08-13

The head of a Chinese toy manufacturing company at the center of a huge U.S. recall has committed suicide, a state-run newspaper said Monday.
Shot himself in the head three times and then hung himself.
Zhang Shuhong, who co-owned Lee Der Industrial Co. Ltd., killed himself at a warehouse over the weekend, days after China announced it had temporarily banned exports by the company, the Southern Metropolis Daily said. Lee Der made 967,000 toys recalled earlier this month by Mattel Inc. because they were made with paint found to have excessive amounts of lead. The plastic preschool toys, sold under the Fisher-Price brand in the U.S., included the popular Big Bird, Elmo, Dora and Diego characters. It was among the largest recalls in recent months involving Chinese products, which have come under fire for globally for containing potentially dangerous high levels of chemicals and toxins.

The Southern Metropolis Daily said that a supplier, Zhang's best friend, sold Lee Der fake paint which was used in the toys. "The boss and the company were harmed by the paint supplier, the closest friend of our boss," a manager surnamed Liu was quoted as saying. Liu said Zhang hung himself on Saturday, according to the report. It is common for disgraced officials to commit suicide in China. "When I got there around 5 p.m., police had already sealed off the area," Liu said.

A company official who answered the telephone at the Lee Der factory in the southern city of Foshan on Monday said he had not heard of the news. A man at Lee Der's main office in Hong Kong said the company was not accepting interviews and hung up. According to a search on a registry of Hong Kong companies, Zhang - whose name is spelled Cheung Shu-hung in official documents - is a co-owner of Lee Der. The other owner, Chiu Kwei-tsun, did not return telephone messages left for him.

The recall by El Segundo, California-based Mattel came just two months after RC2 Corp., a New York company, recalled 1.5 million Chinese-made wooden railroad toys and set parts from its Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway product line because of lead paint. The maker, Hansheng Wood Products Factory, was also included in the export ban announced Thursday by the General Administration for Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, one of China's quality watchdogs. The administration also ordered both companies to evaluate and change their business practices.
"Learn to lie better."
Lead poisoning can cause vomiting, anemia and learning difficulties. In extreme cases, it can cause severe neurological damage and death. The quality watchdog also said police were investigating two companies' use of "fake plastic pigment" but did not give any details. Such pigments are a type of industrial latex usually used to increase surface gloss and smoothness. Telephones rang unanswered at the public security bureau in Foshan and at Dongxing New Energy Company, which is the paint supplier. In its report, the Southern Metropolis Daily said Zhang, who was in his 50s, treated his 5,000-odd employees well and always paid them on time.

The morning of his suicide, he greeted workers and chatted with some of them, the newspaper said. Chinese companies often have long supply chains, making it difficult to trace the exact origin of components, chemicals and food additives.
Either this changes or there needs to be a total ban on Chinese imports.
On Sunday, a Chinese court sentenced a reporter to a year in jail for faking a television story about cardboard-filled meat buns in a case that has drawn even more attention to China's poor food safety record. Zi Beijia, 28, pleaded guilty to charges of infringing on the reputation of a commodity during his trial at the Beijing No. 2 Intermediate Court, the official Xinhua News Agency said. He was sentenced to a year in jail and a fine of $132, it said.
He's hoping they won't like his buns either.
Zi's story, reportedly shot with a hidden camera, appeared to show a makeshift kitchen where people made steamed buns stuffed with shredded cardboard softened with caustic soda plus a little bit of fatty pork. Zi paid four migrant workers from China's northern Shaanxi province to prepare the buns according to his instructions, Xinhua said. The buns were then fed to dogs, it said. The story was first broadcast on Beijing Television's Life Channel, where Zi was a freelance reporter, on July 8 and then again on China Central Television. It was also widely seen on YouTube.com.


Posted by:Zenster

#6  Pappy, this was discussed previously, although it is no less pertinent. However, America's politicians have no excuse for ignoring the threat to their electorate.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-08-13 23:58  

#5  Paul Midler:

One of the problems facing China is that manufacturers continue to engage in a practice I call "quality fade." This is the deliberate and secret habit of widening profit margins through a reduction in the quality of materials. Importers usually never notice what's happening; downward changes are subtle but progressive. The initial production sample is fine, but with each successive production run, a bit more of the necessary inputs are missing.

What is maddening to importers is that quality fade often occurs in the last place an importer thinks to check. The factory owner who practices quality fade knows exactly where he stands with his customer in these cat-and-mouse games. He has virtually nothing to lose and only margin to gain--and, having gotten away with it once, no one should be surprised when he goes for it again. Because it takes importers a long time to find suppliers and to get them up to speed, importers keep their suppliers a secret. Even when it is in their collective interest to share information, importers keep to themselves.

When a product is recalled in the U.S., the importer pays the cost of that recall. It remains next to impossible to take legal action in China, and only in the rarest case can an importer successfully sue the supplier responsible for a product failure. Since most suppliers are paid in full well before goods leave the factory, the importer doesn't even enjoy the leverage that comes with owing payment to the supplier. The average importer has far less leverage than imagined.

There is a sense of urgency in China, the feeling that one must work fast before the window of opportunity closes. For factories, that means taking shortcuts on quality. Many factory owners can't see beyond the next purchase order. One reason for the short-sightedness may have to do with China's political environment.

The one-party government does what it wants, when it wants. And while there may be some advantages to a government that can operate without restraint or controversy, such a system limits predictability and leaves the business sector keenly aware that it is subject to the whims of officials who may or may not know which policy is best.
Posted by: Pappy   2007-08-13 21:20  

#4  most certainly not enough to bother the politicians

After enough repetitions of such malfeasance, it's our traitor elite politicians that become the root cause of this problem.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-08-13 20:38  

#3  So Mattel made a deal with the devil and now they're finding it's not as good a deal as it once seemed. Are they getting a little nervous? I hope so. I remember my wife telling me when our children were small what a great reputation Fisher-Price had. Seems to be a little tarnish on that reputation now. But probably not enough that the general public will notice and most certainly not enough to bother the politicians.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2007-08-13 16:10  

#2  So ya wanna fuck with Big Bird and Elmo, huh buddy?
Posted by: tu3031   2007-08-13 14:53  

#1  You gets what you pays for. Unions are a problem. But so is importing cheap labor outside the law and shipping your manufacturing base overseas. Law-abiding, traditional families are families where a man can earn enough to support his family and a mother can stay home; where he can put something aside for the care of his parents and the education of his children. A strong country makes the steel it will need in time of war and the electronics it will need to make its weapons work.

We have been sold out.
Posted by: Excalibur   2007-08-13 10:41  

00:00