163 Workers discovered in Shocking Slave-Like conditions at BYD factory

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  • Опубліковано 13 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,5 тис.

  • @electricviking
    @electricviking  18 днів тому +2

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    • @mariomastadon7650
      @mariomastadon7650 17 днів тому

      BYD is NOT doing this in China because labor law is VERY strict in China with HEAVY fines... Let me explain something to you. For someone that has been in China for 20 years, holding their wages and passport might be a good thing. Construction workers are renown for getting their wages at the end of the year and never returning to work, especially around Chinese new year. So, many companies only pay on the 10th of the following month. Holding their passport and wages is probably to keep them from disappearing into Brazil and ensures they return to China to collect their wages and take care of their families that are relying on them. As for the conditions, well that's unacceptable!

    • @SteveIceT01
      @SteveIceT01 16 днів тому +4

      @Sam, here is the answer of workers in Brazil. "Hear what workers at China's BYD site in Brazil say about 'slavery-like' working conditions"
      ua-cam.com/video/GnmjbFKRH8g/v-deo.html
      First of all, westerners do not judge immedialtly, because you think you are right. First learn about the society, their customs, their culture.
      It's normal for them to work at the site in compounds. This is everywhere in China and also outside. That's why you will see with chinese new year mass "migration" in china.

    • @tkh2944
      @tkh2944 16 днів тому

      ​​​​​@@SteveIceT01Sam's culture & upbringing is different from the Chinese. I doubt he even understand that some nefarious forces is trying to create, as usual, an issue out of nothing.
      I saw aircon, bed bunk, mattress, crates of food, running water, etc there. These are considered adequate to rough it out by their standards. Such workers in foreign locations normally get better pay than at home, else why go ?
      Most beds shown are without mattresses. But, did he know that the Chinese may want to sleep on firm surfaces ? I bet he didn't know Chinese can sleep on hard wooden or porcelain pillows !?😅

    • @PL22-JudgeDredd
      @PL22-JudgeDredd 16 днів тому

      Electric Viking, i am posting the letter by the employees of BYD and read out by them at a press conference. Originally it was in Mandarin and translated by Shanghai Eye:
      A Thursday video showed Chinese workers from BYD contractor in Brazil denying allegations by Brazilian labor authorities that they are victims of human trafficking.
      On the same day, Jinjiang Group, the contractor for Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD, rebuked to allegations of “slavery-like conditions”. Jinjiang stated that these claims were not true and were the result of translation errors.
      It said being called “enslaved” insulted its employees’ dignity and prompted a joint letter of protest.
      Li Yunfei, BYD’s PR manager, reposted the statement on Weibo, accusing “foreign forces” of “smearing Chinese brands and harming China-Brazil relations”.
      Brazilian labor authorities reported on Wednesday that 163 Chinese workers were working under poor conditions at a construction site for a BYD-owned factory in Bahia state.
      On Wednesday, China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said the Chinese embassy in Brazil was communicating with Brazilian counterparts to verify the situation and handle it.
      BYD, which is building the factory to produce 150,000 cars annually, aims to begin production in Brazil by 2024 or early 2025, marking its largest overseas market investment.
      ------------------------
      Fyi, should something like this happen, rest assured the Chinese contractor would be in deep shit. The Chinese govt does not condone such treatment.

    • @tkh2944
      @tkh2944 16 днів тому

      @@electricviking May I ask whether you have heard or know that wooden or porcelain pillows exist in China ?

  • @MarcusChase-f9g
    @MarcusChase-f9g 18 днів тому +201

    I run a quarry in Brazil. You are correct it would have cost sub 20USD to buy a basic mattress (90BRL).Worker in brazil have a lot of rights and are backed up by a pro-worker labour tribunal. Business owners who do not respect worker's rights in Brazil are foolhardy and shortsighted. In this case, my first inclination would be that BYD contracted a Chinese construction company that treated their workers as they would in China which runs afoul of Brazilian labour rules.

    • @Storm4155
      @Storm4155 18 днів тому +19

      They would not be allowed to treat workers this way in China. BYD surely must have staff there monitoring the contractor. Someone from BYD senior management in China needs to fly to Brasil and sort it out.

    • @andersonandrighi4539
      @andersonandrighi4539 18 днів тому +23

      I used to be a lawyer, now I'm teaching and I have to say Brazilian labour laws are fare. Not as protective as some EU countries and not lax as United States or non existing like Bangladesh. Helding documentation is a typical faul of slave like conditions. The rotten food and lack of quality in the labour quarter as helding wages is a typical way modern slavery.

    • @mrblurblur2003
      @mrblurblur2003 18 днів тому +8

      Damn I feel so soory fer the workers, I hope thwey get to keep their jobs so they can continue to have something to feed their families. 😢

    • @thyristo
      @thyristo 18 днів тому

      This happens when the Chinese contract in problematic countries based on Trust.
      If the Chinese don't organize everything on their own nothing works.

    • @tsubadaikhan6332
      @tsubadaikhan6332 18 днів тому +22

      There's about half a billion people in Brasil. Why do they need to import 163 low skilled Chinese Labourers?

  • @tomfull6637
    @tomfull6637 18 днів тому +132

    Kudos for speaking out!!!
    Exactly like the workers in Qatar building for the football World Cup! Their passports were also confiscated to prevent them from fleeing the appalling conditions!
    Thanks for doing the right thing!
    Kind regards
    Anders
    Sweden

    • @SamZedder
      @SamZedder 18 днів тому

      The Kafala system will likely be used again for World Cup 2034 where the bidding process was rigged and only one "special" country bid and won.

    • @ellengran6814
      @ellengran6814 18 днів тому +5

      Miners of lithium, sulphur etc in poor countries are also living in terrible conditions.

    • @jiaao86
      @jiaao86 18 днів тому +7

      你有没有了解真相就发表评论?这些工人把护照交给公司是为了让公司统一办理居留许可和各种证件,这在中国是普遍现象,更何况这些人是没有多少文化,以前没有出过国的建筑工人。另外,我今天也问了我的巴西朋友,确实在巴西有很严厉的劳工法规,视频里的居住设施和就餐环境在巴西就是属于违反规定。今天中国的社交媒体上也在讨论这个事,很多人看了视频里的宿舍画面也觉得不理解,那种居住条件如果放在中国某些修路修桥的环境里真不叫什么事,至少看起来屋子里是整洁的,这就是文化差异造成的,而且本来巴西现在就是夏天。

    • @1voluntaryist
      @1voluntaryist 18 днів тому +4

      @@jiaao86 Sam stated at the outset he checked the authenticity. 31 workers, 1 toilet is a fact hard to explain.

    • @ПИЦКВлад
      @ПИЦКВлад 18 днів тому

      ..and these Indian workers in Qatar look exactly like Chinese.. these Asian governments are all alike😳😁⁉️

  • @driftlessheights6177
    @driftlessheights6177 18 днів тому +40

    In 1985 I was sent to work with a oil exploration crew in Somalia. Was a French company with most of the labor purchased from the Communist Somali government.
    The workers complained to me that they had no beds or broken metal cots. They showed me these beds.
    I talked to the French administrators. They said when they gave Somalis beds they sold their beds for cash.
    Not surprising, since the French company only paid $1 per day for labor plus $1 a day to buy food. (12 hours/day)
    The beds would sell for $75; about 2 months pay.
    Third world labor is commonly abused. 😞

    • @tupolevi
      @tupolevi 15 днів тому

      Year: 1985 vs 2024,
      Salary of USD $1/day vs 13000rmb, $1780/30 = $59.33/ day (assume Chinese construction workers work 30 days/mth, and 12 hrs/day, likely they will work only 6 days a week or even 5.5 days a week, extra pay for additional hours is not included )
      Cost a mattress 2 months pay vs 2 days pay
      Reasons: exchange for money vs beating summer heat (in summer, lying on a mattress will make one feel like lying on a burning stove)

  • @davidhlin3023
    @davidhlin3023 18 днів тому +94

    In Hong Kong we slept on a bamboo mat rather than a mattress. A lot cooler in the summer.

    • @doobtom271
      @doobtom271 17 днів тому

      Correct, only western people thought mattress is essential, Asians enjoys bamboo mat in summer, (Japanese tatami if you prefer, so it sounds more "High End") LOLs

    • @downtomars6268
      @downtomars6268 17 днів тому +10

      Not uncommon in hot climates to sleep on rattans, don't really hear Westerners or Europeans do this.

    • @itsdeclan7733
      @itsdeclan7733 17 днів тому +9

      My Thai mother in law is in her 80's and refuses to sleep on the brand new bed and mattress we bought her. Instead she sleeps on a thin hard bamboo mat like she has done all her life.

    • @ruixuanli1730
      @ruixuanli1730 17 днів тому +6

      Not everyone likes mattress (too warm, soft, back hurt). The conditions look like regular dormitory.

    • @waichungsham1578
      @waichungsham1578 17 днів тому +4

      My grand parents in Hong Kong slept on hard beds in the 70s I couldn't get used to it

  • @ix-Xafra
    @ix-Xafra 18 днів тому +6

    Kudos for covering this story objectively given your pro EVZ stance.

  • @boballen9095
    @boballen9095 17 днів тому +1

    Thanks for reporting on this as well as the frank response. Please stay on top of this to the best of your ability.

  • @rudyroedling188
    @rudyroedling188 18 днів тому +54

    This was normal when I was in the Czech army, also slave conditions and treatmen, 1970.

  • @BeelP.
    @BeelP. 18 днів тому +13

    The workers were Chinese employed by its Chinese contractors. There appears to be appalling conditions but are not really unusual on Indonesian, Malaysian, or Myanmar construction sites.

    • @AdamOHalloran
      @AdamOHalloran 18 днів тому

      Let’s pretend your generalisation is not a generalisation and then ask: does that make it right or fair - let alone acceptable?

    • @tupolevi
      @tupolevi 15 днів тому +1

      @@AdamOHalloran
      Under the labour law in your country, does the construction companies have to provide air conditioners for their construction workers on site? Does your local grid provide 24x7 electricity full time with uninterrupted power? C'mon it is in Brazil and not in America.

    • @tkh2944
      @tkh2944 15 днів тому

      @@AdamOHalloran Does your country have laws that regulate how people must sleep ?😶

    • @francechou
      @francechou 15 днів тому

      In Brazil these working environments are regulated. There are laws that state what constitutes modern slavery. Yet every once in a while Labour Inspectors Raid farms And construction sites where foreigners And Brazilians are found in these conditions.

  • @WonaNabi
    @WonaNabi 18 днів тому +23

    Only 163 workers for such a huge site? what about the rest of the people? it's definitely not the complete story

    • @PlayShorts3
      @PlayShorts3 18 днів тому +4

      163 Chinese workers, amd the rest are probably Brillian.

    • @urielmarx
      @urielmarx 17 днів тому

      163 found in slavery conditions - but there was more problems, only not this level of severity. And there's only one of the contractors, the project is going on with the others.
      But yes, the case is open, BYD said that has rescinded this contractor, and there will be more investigations and a lot of juridic follow-ups.

    • @liulaolao7269
      @liulaolao7269 17 днів тому +1

      @@urielmarx "slavery conditions"?
      Please check up your dictionary on slavery.

    • @cb250nighthawk3
      @cb250nighthawk3 17 днів тому +1

      ​@@PlayShorts3
      Nothing mentioned about Brazilian workers was what I read in my local news in S. E. Asia. The 163 Chinese workers were employed by one of the subcontractors of BYD.

    • @canaldouglas123
      @canaldouglas123 16 днів тому

      ​@@cb250nighthawk3 Beazilian workers are not in the same situation, the Brazilian workers reported with photos the situation with chinese workers to the local midia and then the government make this operation, but with beazilian workers they respect the law

  • @Gerry-t1w
    @Gerry-t1w 18 днів тому +121

    Most Chinese people do not use mattresses for various reasons, especially in summer or high humidity weather conditions.

    • @polaris1985
      @polaris1985 18 днів тому +1

      @HdurmriSharjah-w1e hahaha

    • @jkselama4698
      @jkselama4698 18 днів тому +1

      @HdurmriSharjah-w1e That's just you.
      But sleeping with no mattress is one thing, the bathroom situation is utterly not acceptable, if true. And taking away their passports is absolutely illegal and should be severely reprimanded.

    • @kalex381
      @kalex381 18 днів тому

      And most Chinese people eat dirty food and share toilets among 10 people…apparently their passports in Brazil were not confiscated…they were handed to their employee for safekeeping…😂😂

    • @zes7215
      @zes7215 18 днів тому

      wr

    • @rickrandazzo
      @rickrandazzo 18 днів тому +2

      @HdurmriSharjah-w1e lived in Guangzhou 7 years. Saw it several times.... My girlfriend would put blankets down.

  • @Ano-d5o
    @Ano-d5o 18 днів тому +42

    Very viking-like from you to talk about it, respect!

    • @ErnaSolbergXXX
      @ErnaSolbergXXX 18 днів тому +1

      Its always easy to talk about problems on the other side of the earth. The true heroes are the ones who put the focus on local problems where they who do it have all the power to go after you.

    • @Ano-d5o
      @Ano-d5o 18 днів тому

      They’re not famous for taking critique lightly, so kudos

  • @ArchieHwan
    @ArchieHwan 17 днів тому +31

    I'm glad you made this video it reminds me of my transformation from a nobody to good home, $34k monthly and a good daughter full of love

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      @SarahScotch 17 днів тому +1

      My advice to everyone is that saving is great but investment is the key to be successful imagine investing $15,000 and received $472,700.

    • @wilderRobin
      @wilderRobin 17 днів тому

      Unfortunately, not all of us were financially literate early. I was 35 when I finally educated myself and started taking steps. I went from $176,000 in debt with zero savings or retirement to now, 2 years later, fully debt-free and over $1000,000 net worth. I know that doesn't SOUND like a lot, but I'm incredibly proud of it. Now I'm fast-tracking my wealth building (investing $400,000 annually) and don't owe a dime to anyone. It's a good feeling!

    • @Noaharth22
      @Noaharth22 17 днів тому

      4 years ago, I was living paycheck to paycheck, working 40 hours a week. I was a high school dropout with a GED and had a 489 credit score, along with an eviction, repossession, and collections. I got into real estate but encountered unqualified clients who couldn't qualify for a mortgage due to their credit. I found this home-based business here on UA-cam, and it just made sense.

    • @Harryfox-i9k
      @Harryfox-i9k 17 днів тому

      My outlook on money changed when I realized that is better to invest on or before retirement, some people are just putting £15k or £20k With the current market movement at the end of the year they are making millions.

    • @Ropercof5543
      @Ropercof5543 17 днів тому

      wow this awesome I'm 47 and have been looking for ways to be successful, please how??

  • @michaelkiddle3149
    @michaelkiddle3149 18 днів тому +84

    I worked for a gangmaster that treated foreign labour in exactly the same way in the UK 30 years ago
    Some people are completely unscrupulous and despicable

    • @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665
      @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665 18 днів тому +11

      Same problems in the Arab gulf ....
      South and Central Americans in. US .. agriculture and construction..

    • @tkh2944
      @tkh2944 18 днів тому +11

      Can visit the construction sites all over southeast Asia with imported labours (not necessarily Chinese) - same thing.
      Actually worse, no bunk for beds, no Aircon, makeshift huts for quarters, etc.😮

    • @zes7215
      @zes7215 18 днів тому

      wrr

    • @tonypeterson5316
      @tonypeterson5316 18 днів тому +7

      It happened in Australia as well, many kids from Asia were forced to work for nothing in some farms. I'm glad they were rescued. Hopefully BYD will learn from this mistake.

    • @kimchiman1000
      @kimchiman1000 18 днів тому

      Me too, but in Canada. Chinese owned gold mine.

  • @cunawarit
    @cunawarit 18 днів тому +71

    I'm glad you reported on this. We hear lots of positive news on BYD, but we never hear the negatives. This is endemic, it happens with Apple and it happens with BYD too. Slavery continues to be one of the world's biggest challenges despite the fact it is illegal.

    • @kevinakling
      @kevinakling 18 днів тому +10

      @cunawarit yet in America the only slavery anyone talks about happened there 150 years ago. Slavery today? Ignored completely.

    • @tuliomacedosilva1142
      @tuliomacedosilva1142 18 днів тому +9

      A lot of respect to this guy, he didn’t bow down to the industry, his humanity has spoken louder

    • @steak5599
      @steak5599 18 днів тому

      Remember how people were talking about Slave like conditions in Apple Factories and Nike Factories? These are just the high profile one that got exposed. The problem is much deeper because people running these operations are Gangster like organizations.

    • @xen.7140
      @xen.7140 18 днів тому

      @@kevinakling yeah well there's very little the US government can do to combat slavery in China

    • @LivingLonger
      @LivingLonger 18 днів тому +7

      what did you see when the camera man walk into another room? did the beds cover with mattress protectors at video 2:02 ? 😆 Did you call the video shown at 3:18 raw foods as dirty foods? 😆what a 'Shocking Slave-Like conditions' 😂

  • @jointy
    @jointy 16 днів тому +4

    I was going to buy a BYD shark. No longer. Will be sharing this video far and wide.

    • @ihartanto85
      @ihartanto85 16 днів тому

      @@jointy Hear what workers at China's BYD site in Brazil say about 'slavery-like' working conditions: ua-cam.com/video/GnmjbFKRH8g/v-deo.html
      Many Chinese workers sleep on hard surfaces, they don't like mattresses. It's a fact.

    • @Anonymous-g1w4n
      @Anonymous-g1w4n 14 днів тому

      Many Chinese don't feel it is slavery. The workers have the same or worse working conditions in China. That's why Chinese products are so cheap.
      Chinese governors are willing to ignore all these because it strengthens their ability to dominate the country and combat the rest of the world on dumping, followed by economic colonialism.
      Defeating the CCP is not only necessary to liberate the Chinese people but also vital in protecting the jobs and sovereignty of the rest of the countries worldwide.

  • @andrewlau9873
    @andrewlau9873 18 днів тому +69

    The construction company should be held accountable to the full extent of local laws!

    • @frankcoffey
      @frankcoffey 18 днів тому +2

      In this case making the news is more punishment than local laws allow.

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 18 днів тому +5

      I think that may not be enough. Any other place that company is operating should investigate the conditions. If it is a pattern, then the company should be put out of business. Companies that hired the construction company also need to be investigated. We don't want the case where the fines for breaking the law are just a cost of doing business.

    • @frankcoffey
      @frankcoffey 18 днів тому

      @@kensmith5694 I think a 5 year ban from the market would get their attention more than a fine.

    • @r.amoedo4151
      @r.amoedo4151 18 днів тому +5

      100% sure BYD knew and was on board with that. Worker exploration is a key part of china's competitiveness

    • @Galaxy2Free
      @Galaxy2Free 17 днів тому

      ​@@r.amoedo4151 Troll, you're totally IGNORANT about what China has been through during the last 2 to 3 decades for becoming the 2nd largest global economy and the top industrial country.

  • @SMJ-l6r
    @SMJ-l6r 18 днів тому +80

    China doesn't commonly have these conditions in China because in China Chinese people are connected. This DOES happen whenever Chinese workers get sent to poor nations though like Burma and Cambodia. Chinese government in China now is quite strict about labour abuses and miners actually have killed themselves in purposeful accidents to get the massive compensation for their families.
    But once you leave China under a Chinese company, you get locked in a complex and you have no way our or any way to communicate locally.
    In China, we actually watch TV shows about this kind of treatment abroad so it isn't so much of a secret. Do they get their pay in the end? Yes. Did they 100% know what they were signing up for? Sometimes since many people repeatedly go for these types of contracts and get their families in.
    You have to understand that there is a bit of arrogance in assuming everyone needs to meet a certain standard. Some people would rather just be employed and sleeping without a mattress isn't the end of the world for lots of people. This happened with the Xinjiang situation too. People claimed that the people in Xinjiang were being treated like slaves according to western labour laws. But after America placed sanctions on Xinjiang cotton it became much worse and Chinese people started actively buying more Xinjiang cotton to keep them employed.
    This is the entire trail towards development and Chinese people aren't so naive. The US and Canadian transcontinental railroads had a 10% death rate and they couldn't afford American workers so they hired Chinese people who did the job for half the price at $1 a day. Then when they arrived they were charged for food and housing that was free for Americans and Chinese workers ended up with just 20 cents a day despite being far more efficient than American workers. After thousands of dead Chinese workers, America and Canada had the key infrastructure it needed to accelerate it's economy and quickly shooed away all the Chinese workers before the cameras came to take photos.
    But I'm not saying this story because America is the devil. What the Chinese people learned was that it was better to be mistreated in America than to be poor back home. In fact, the Chinese community prospered after that hardship and it's a story repeated all around the world. Chinese people don't look at that piece of history as anti-chinese and more of a lesson that one must always do what's necessary.
    TLDR: these conditions are unimaginable only if you've had the privilege of growing up in fortunate conditions. 30 people using a bathroom is already more bathrooms than our entire neighborhood had growing up. Even old rich Chinese today very likely remember being subsistence farmers with no toilets and electricity.

    • @bossman6174
      @bossman6174 18 днів тому +1

      And Ganges Kahn had slaves as well. This is 2024. All nations have black pages in their history books. NOW is the time that people should be treated right . BYD has the money so there is no excuse to treat them like they do. Get them a matrass. Get them decent food and a fridge. bring in some bathroom facilities and pay them their wages. simple as that. Every excuse you bring on can be wiped of the table.

    • @jldstuff393
      @jldstuff393 18 днів тому +20

      Interesting points, but if a company's shareholders and leaders are profiting off these conditions, then it is still wrong. I'm speaking as someone who has owned byd shares for about a year. I am living a comfortable American life and when I sell my byd shares, which I will because of this, I will make money off the backs of these laborers who are probably making a fraction of what I will make just to support their struggling family half a world away. This is not right and it is our job in positions of comfort to demand better from companies who can do better.

    • @kalex381
      @kalex381 18 днів тому +16

      Now I understand why Chinese cars are so cheap….

    • @antoinepageau8336
      @antoinepageau8336 18 днів тому +6

      Let’s see if Warren Buffet agrees with you.

    • @DorJinTan
      @DorJinTan 18 днів тому +10

      It's v difficult to make whytes see their privilege...

  • @chillxxx241
    @chillxxx241 18 днів тому +123

    Surprised he spoke about this on his channel.

    • @runePV
      @runePV 18 днів тому +10

      me too.. he seems to be a real electric boy

    • @bt3779
      @bt3779 18 днів тому +27

      A huge China shill, still glad this was covered. Not at all shocking though.

    • @BigBassHeavy
      @BigBassHeavy 18 днів тому +11

      Me too but good to hear this talked about. I wonder if other car firms are equally as bad in this area. If China are serious about global expansion they really need to sort this primitive way of thinking. Brazil should have insisted on a local workforce to build the factories.

    • @LivingLonger
      @LivingLonger 18 днів тому +6

      yeah. what did you see when the camera man walk into another room? did the beds cover with mattress protectors at video 2:02 ? 😆 Did you call the video shown at 3:18 raw foods as dirty foods? 😆

    • @HeidiKernstad
      @HeidiKernstad 18 днів тому

      @@bt3779How is he a huge China shill? He definitely is an “electric” shill, and he likes Chinese electric vehicles. Does that now make him a China shill?
      Oh, I’m sorry. He’s supposed to stick to the U.S. state department script.
      “Communist China bad. Communist China threat to “global security.” China steal, copy. China EV a bad, tofu quality. American EV superior technology because America is exceptional. Blah blah blah.

  • @baron226
    @baron226 18 днів тому +7

    应该是总包还没进场,前期的土方整平,地质探勘测量,围挡单位,临时保安,之类的.... 这些工种本来就是游击方式工作,byd根本不需要安排他们。 场地都是临电临水,哪来的厕所哦,周边没有住宿最多就是住货柜屋,比如地质探勘单位,最多一个月把工作完成,买床垫做啥

  • @vitob1882
    @vitob1882 18 днів тому +7

    Back in the 90's, I was living in Peru, a Chinese company had purchased an iron producing mine, which they renamed to "Shougan Hierro Peru" in the Peruvian city of Pisco. They brought thousands of Chinese people in ships and had them living in quarters like the ones you showed. They were paid in rice bowls and rode bikes to the work sites. Word was back then that they used to be farmers in China.
    I thought that had changed.... guess not. I have Chinese friends who live well, even better than in the West. I am thinking, maybe, in the farmland, they still lack behind. They told me that they need passports to live in the city. Any feedback on this?
    To finish my story, the Peruvian government stepped in and had the Chinese workers shipped back to China and replaced them with Peruvian workers.

    • @LivingLonger
      @LivingLonger 18 днів тому +2

      what did you see when the camera man walk into another room? did the beds cover with mattress protectors at video 2:02 ? 😆 Did you call the video shown at 3:18 raw foods as dirty foods? 😆what a 'Shocking Slave-Like conditions' 😂

  • @jimamizzi1
    @jimamizzi1 17 днів тому +4

    I’ve looked into this story Sam, apparently the subcontractor is in question, when it was brought to BYDs attention the sh**t hit the fan. They say passports were taken to do the necessary paperwork and would be returned ASAP. conditions were bad but according to the Chinese workers they were ok because they had seen worse and the money is good even though they have been withholding some so the workers don’t leave like some have.any wonder they can build cheap cars.

    • @phoenix_yih
      @phoenix_yih 14 днів тому

      This is the truth behind China's speed, oppressing labor, threatening, seizing wages, spiritually destructive and brainwashing. Communism is a cult that describes darkness as a bright, fictional history, and the people generally hate Western countries, but envy the openness and market economy of Western countries.

  • @patbyrneme007
    @patbyrneme007 18 днів тому +30

    I noticed in the video that the workers accommodation had a new looking air conditioner on the wall. The price of this machine would have been enough to buy basic mattresses for all single bunk beds. Doesn't make sense.

    • @steak5599
      @steak5599 18 днів тому +7

      This has nothing to do with what make financial Sense, it has to do with people running these operations are Gangster like organization. There are simply no thoughts on the well being of the workers. You will find these type of operation outside of OCED countries.

    • @andersonandrighi4539
      @andersonandrighi4539 18 днів тому +4

      The AC unit was not there for those workers. That most likely is part of the building and they had orders not to turn the AC on. When slave like conditions are found it usually is a combination of allegations like: lack of living conditions in workers quarters, food that is spoiled or not suitable for consumption, holding documentation and payment without a legal reason. It builds up before the D.A. (Public Ministry in Brazil) can press charges against the employer.

    • @LivingLonger
      @LivingLonger 18 днів тому +5

      yeah doesn't make sense. what did you see when the camera man walk into another room? did the beds cover with mattress protectors in the video at 2:02 ? 😆 Did you call the video shown at 3:18 raw foods as dirty foods? 😆what a 'Shocking Slave-Like conditions' ? 😂

    • @AdamOHalloran
      @AdamOHalloran 18 днів тому

      @@LivingLongerI know right? Everyone who has been there (sound that doesn’t include you, or I) must be completely mistaken. Every. Single. Person.

    • @Bisccaroth
      @Bisccaroth 18 днів тому +4

      It is not uncommon for the Chinese to sleep without mattresses. Some believe it is better for their backs.

  • @JuJu-vj3bz
    @JuJu-vj3bz 18 днів тому +61

    This is one of the reasons unions are important. I applaud you for bringing this to our attention.

    • @antoinepageau8336
      @antoinepageau8336 18 днів тому +2

      Correct, like in NorthAmerica there were safety risks before unions showed the way. Are they still relevant today in NorthAmerica? I don’t think so.

    • @elephantintheroom5678
      @elephantintheroom5678 18 днів тому

      @@antoinepageau8336 Of course unions are still relevant. Employers in Texas and Florida have limited water breaks for people working in the hot sun! Employers are unscrupulous.

    • @philnewton2011
      @philnewton2011 18 днів тому

      Agreed 100%

    • @philnewton2011
      @philnewton2011 18 днів тому +3

      @@antoinepageau8336 Of course unions are relevant in every country. One doesn't get improved wages and working conditions by asking nicely -- particularly when those they are asking enjoy the power and organization provided by incorporation and...wait for it...contracts. Getting a contract is what unions do.

    • @stormytempest6521
      @stormytempest6521 17 днів тому +1

      YOUR RIGHT 100%

  • @johnmoulton9728
    @johnmoulton9728 18 днів тому +1

    Thank you Sam , I greatly enjoyed & respect your videos

  • @jacobusackermann5254
    @jacobusackermann5254 18 днів тому +8

    This story might be true but it might also be the construction company to blame. Here in South Africa we have gold mines that belong to the Chinese close to the town where I live. I havent heard from friends and people working there, that they have not been paid, neither have they been ill treated or forced to work unreasonable hours and in terrible conditions. Just trying to state a true fact.

    • @markvalery8632
      @markvalery8632 18 днів тому +2

      Guessing you haven't heard is because to keep the operation going you limit the freedom of the workers to get the news out about conditions or treatments. We had a house in our neighborhood purchased a couple decades ago. There were approximately 15 adults living in the 4 bedroom house. Every morning a couple of vans showed up, all the chinese workers got in, and off they drove, until they returned them that night. I NEVER saw a single person from that house ever walk around the neighborhood or do anything outside. It took about 5 years for the house to degrade, they disappeared, and someone bought and renovated the house.

  • @SpiritintheSky.
    @SpiritintheSky. 17 днів тому

    Congratulations on the increasing success of your channel. It's well deserved.

  • @Fomites
    @Fomites 18 днів тому +10

    I've lived in China and visit frequently. The Chinese culture is very energetic indeed and this is almost certainly why Chinese labor was imported. Hard fast work is part of the Chines ethos. The company responsible was probably counting on cultural and language isolation to obscure the bad conditions. The construction industry globally does not have a good record. I wonder if the Chinese workers thought thsy were getting a bad deal though?

    • @canalesjuan356
      @canalesjuan356 18 днів тому

      What the Chinese have learned from history is that the winner takes all. If we lose, we will be the true slaves. Europe and the US were ahead for hundreds of years through war, you saw it, the technical blockade and the threat of sanctions, and you just had to accept their terms or live like the Cubans.

  • @TheFudgism
    @TheFudgism 17 днів тому

    Un ironically posting this while also being anti union is craaaazzzyyyy. Yep you’re the real hero in this story.

  • @cuteandfunnyearthlings2863
    @cuteandfunnyearthlings2863 18 днів тому +43

    It has to be accurate if its from BBC LOL

    • @StuntPilot88
      @StuntPilot88 18 днів тому +6

      Good point.. will have to see .

    • @hanhk6871
      @hanhk6871 18 днів тому

      BBC is the biggest fake news media

    • @someuser7501
      @someuser7501 18 днів тому +6

      It's all over the Brazilian press. Just spend the whole two seconds looking.

    • @mk1st
      @mk1st 18 днів тому +2

      I'm sure Instagram will send some actual journalists to have a look.

    • @gr8dvd
      @gr8dvd 16 днів тому +2

      Paid Chinese troll?

  • @dieselfunk65
    @dieselfunk65 16 днів тому

    Well done Sam, much respect for reporting this terrible treatment of those workers.

    • @tkh2944
      @tkh2944 16 днів тому

      Ignorance breed ignorance 🙄😂

    • @Ausijoeblow
      @Ausijoeblow 16 днів тому

      ua-cam.com/video/GnmjbFKRH8g/v-deo.htmlsi=zhkjpfzYw-E8dG5L

  • @Gi-Home
    @Gi-Home 18 днів тому +10

    You have a great channel and the following is meant as a constructive critique; From the looks of it this is just a predatory propaganda hit job, I love your channel but you haven't been to China and haven't worked in remote conditions. I have lived and worked in several countries including China (as an professional and as a business man). Let's start with the mattresses, when my Chinese in-laws arrived to visit us when I was living in the Seattle area they stayed at my home they slept on a queen size bed with a hard mattress. They were tired the first day and immediately took a short nap, when they awakened they told my wife how nice the room was but that the mattress was far too soft. My wife told me and after a short discussion I went to the nearest Lowes and picked up a few 3x1's and sheets of plywood put it all together. My in-laws were a little embarrassed with my fussing over them. But it was the first time I had met my in-laws and wanted them to feel special (sucking up to the in-laws can pay huge dividends). All they had was a thin blanket on top of a couple of sheets and they were so happy.
    When I stayed at my sister in-laws in China for several weeks, I slept on a bed that was essentially a mattress that was as hard as a sheet of plywood with a sheet on top. I finally adapted to this the last few days I stayed with them. They were affluent and had no idea that sleeping was extremely uncomfortable every night except for a couple of days at the end of my stay.
    The overheads I saw clearly show that this site is barely established and for whatever reason the normal housing barracks hadn't all arrived for whatever reason. The passport thing is a little different, but you can't assume that it's coercive, the workers may prefer it that way. When you project intent without knowing the culture you will more often than not be making naive assumptions.
    In regards to the "dirty food", in my extensive travels and knowledge of Chinese both in China and abroad is that the food is just as clean as anything I've experienced in the west. I imagine that you get trolled a bit about being a China lover or paid shill, I get it sometimes you want to get some off your back, but your title is click bait and misinforms. From 18 to 26 years old I worked as a union sheet metal worker in Canada, after that I went back to university and studied economics. When I was a tradesmen I loved working 5x12's of 6x16's, my preference was 7x16s since I was away from my young family and a day off meant reduced earnings and boredom.
    I can assure you that if and when you ever visit China that you will be very pissed at the endless BS they've fed you for decades, just be observant. I suspect that the labor inspector either had issues or that there are shenanigans or corruption that led to this political hit job. I appreciate the hard work that you do and I gave you a thumbs up, I've watched your channel on and off for quite a while, otherwise I would not bothered.

    • @briantower279
      @briantower279 17 днів тому

      Very questionable piece Sam. You forgot your intro. Smell a rat. Compromised for $$?

  • @ovi9610
    @ovi9610 17 днів тому

    Thank you Sam for this video. This is important to be broadcasted if it is true. All workers at any factory should have Brazilian workers law and rights. No more slavery in 2024. Very bad for BYD brand image.

  • @d1skel452
    @d1skel452 17 днів тому +4

    Well done Viking, I honestly didn’t think you would make this video. I believe this is the top of the iceberg in regards to forced labour and ethical business practices

  • @alexrel1
    @alexrel1 15 днів тому

    I am Brazilian and owner of a BYD Dolphin Mini (Seagull) and one thing that really surprises me is that BYD saw it coming: more than a month before there were already claims been reported in the media about inhumane working conditions in the construction of the new factory.

  • @Gerry-t1w
    @Gerry-t1w 18 днів тому +13

    Passport is the most important document for tourists abroad. You don’t understand how much trouble a lost passport can cause for you and your team. Keeping 163 passports in a safe place is really not a bad idea. What's more, these workers want to finish their work as quickly as possible so they can be reunited with their families. Since they do not leave the construction site very often, the passport is really a burden for the worker as he has to keep it safe to avoid being stolen, or eaten by a rat.

    • @crosslink1493
      @crosslink1493 18 днів тому +3

      Just your comment about passports being eaten by rats shows how bad the conditions are in this place. Its Brazil, not China, you have to run the construction project by Brazilian labor and construction standards, not Chinese standards.

    • @dochi1958
      @dochi1958 18 днів тому

      Then maybe ALL their food should also be locked away to protect it from "rats"? WTF is wrong with you? Very sick mind, is all I can say.

    • @LivingLonger
      @LivingLonger 18 днів тому +3

      what did you see when the camera man walk into another room? did the beds cover with mattress protectors in the video at 2:02 ? 😆 Did you call the video shown at 3:18 raw foods as dirty foods? 😆what a 'Shocking Slave-Like conditions' ? 😂

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому +4

      @@crosslink1493 where u keep ur passport and money? in your belong bags? not worry it got stolen?
      or let the company keep them safe for u?

    • @diegomatter69
      @diegomatter69 18 днів тому

      ​@LivingLonger pasting your same rebuttal comment a thousand times in the comments does not make you more believable. It sounds like a bot of the Chinese government commenting...

  • @petershores
    @petershores 18 днів тому

    Thank you for reporting this - sometimes had wondered if you were a bit too favouring China - this post restores my faith.

  • @hlr4248
    @hlr4248 18 днів тому +26

    I can’t tell how grateful I am that you made this video. Massive respect and congratulations to you my friend.

  • @nawedfaizi2042
    @nawedfaizi2042 17 днів тому +1

    Bro, those people are living a better life than most of the USA population 😂 keep going

  • @Emboaba
    @Emboaba 18 днів тому +5

    As a Brazilian this is bad news. Brazilians in general have good expectations about this factory

    • @firstlast-pt5pp
      @firstlast-pt5pp 18 днів тому

      positive in the north and negative in the south - race and class in Brazil - the plant is in the northeast - least European and poorest in Brazil - the south and media in Brazil are pro- washington - the media and the way they talk about China you think they are American - and yes the US/European media report it on schedule - note that worksite dorms are "slave like" condition everywhere

    • @HughJass-313
      @HughJass-313 17 днів тому +1

      As a Brazilian,
      can you tell me IF the Factory they are building.... WILL have BRAZILIANS Working there?
      Or will the Factory still be run by Chinese workers afterward?

    • @firstlast-pt5pp
      @firstlast-pt5pp 17 днів тому

      @HughJass-313 - building constructions have temporally work camps in many parts of the world - none at vehicle plants

  • @dandybkaer715
    @dandybkaer715 17 днів тому

    It's very common in many parts of the world that workers choose to stay at the constructive site in order to minimize costs. Here in Thailand we had a house built a couple of years ago, and the construction workers put up this very primitive camp without much comfort at all. They didn't buy mattresses, just slept on a blanket. Only an outdoor cooking place, and a very primitive shower with just a hose behind a piece of plastic. This is what they do in order to make as much money as possible and nobody is telling them they can't live like this. It's up to them.

  • @GlobalDrifter1000
    @GlobalDrifter1000 18 днів тому +15

    I was a liaison to the Thai army in 1967. I bought my own bunk with mattress and mosquito netting. They had bunks with plywood and no mattresses or mosquito netting. They seem perfectly content with that.

  • @MENDNZ
    @MENDNZ 16 днів тому

    A piece of carpet makes a soft enough matress i have found. No spinal problems as if sleeping on poor quality foam. That dorm looks clean enough though and painted.

  • @luisgrod0
    @luisgrod0 18 днів тому +5

    All humans deserve
    dignity and liberties.

  • @davidshen8861
    @davidshen8861 18 днів тому +1

    The workers in Brazil were paid 13000 RMB (1781 USD) per month per person, this is a lot higher than the average wage in China. The local average wage in Brazil is 800 USD per month, how could you call them slave work, when they made more than you. The local workforce in Brazil want all the workers to sent back, not require them to change the work environment, because they want those jobs for the locals. All the employees were interviewed by the media, and they made a public statement that they really want those jobs.

  • @winkus8586
    @winkus8586 18 днів тому +3

    As a person who live in equator. I can't sleep on mattress without air conditioner.
    The mattress will be soaked by my sweat

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому +1

      same as in asia, impossible to sleep on mattress with noon AC....these are construction site dont expect it to have electricity and AC

  • @gr8dvd
    @gr8dvd 16 днів тому

    Was thinking shame on Brazilian construction company until hearing these were imported Chinese workers. So shame on BYD! Good on you for calling BS on BYD feigning ignorance.

  • @chenweixun6731
    @chenweixun6731 18 днів тому +2

    Isn’t that the condition of foreign workers working in Singapore as well.

  • @supergroovy8346
    @supergroovy8346 18 днів тому +1

    This is very common in Asia. I mean all over South Asia South East Asia. Construction companies are the worst abusers of worker conditions and sometimes involves human trafficking's.

  • @jameswalker7899
    @jameswalker7899 18 днів тому +9

    Very nicely expressed regarding BYD's misconduct. Warmest compliments. Thank you, sir! :)

  • @guavabakka
    @guavabakka 17 днів тому

    Incredible. Thank you for reporting.

  • @Fomites
    @Fomites 18 днів тому +14

    Australian here. I have reluctantly surrendered my passport on Chinese run cruises (to South Korea) and in hotels in China. It's part of the modus operandi and not considered to be malicious, only practical. This needs to be kept in mind.

    • @AdamOHalloran
      @AdamOHalloran 18 днів тому +1

      For a holiday, I’ll make an assumption that in the context of the holiday in China, it makes sense (even if it’s not done in Europe or the pacific or the US) - but this context of working full time, is very different.

    • @mouse454
      @mouse454 18 днів тому

      Also done in a lot of places to stop super budgets tourists from doing a runner. Always a little worrying try to pre-pay or cash if you can.

    • @PeterKubicko13
      @PeterKubicko13 17 днів тому

      I would not give my up passport, rather not attend the dodgy place.

  • @kitcat6053
    @kitcat6053 18 днів тому +2

    It looks much better than the condition in China. It's common that sleep on the wood panel in hot summer if there is no AC.

    • @SteveIceT01
      @SteveIceT01 18 днів тому +1

      Well, there is an AC, just watch closely.

  • @gregdelong1539
    @gregdelong1539 18 днів тому +8

    Good for you for standing up and speaking on behalf of the workers being abused. I just subscribed to your channel.

  • @kenxie6487
    @kenxie6487 18 днів тому +1

    Mattress might not be an issue, that is optional. When I was in university in China, in summer, I don't have mattress myself. Chinese people like hard mattress or even sleep on wood when hot. They believe this is good for the spine. That said, recent days I believe they changed to hard mattress instead of just on wood.

  • @leevuong8843
    @leevuong8843 18 днів тому +25

    Mattresses. I know many older Chinese in Canada who totally hate sleeping on a mattress and much prefer a hard floor or a carpet. I don't believe that a mattress is a standard of human rights...

    • @elephantintheroom5678
      @elephantintheroom5678 18 днів тому +5

      And taking their passports? What about holding back 60% of their pay? Or feeding them food unrefrigerated in hot Brazilian temperatures?

    • @LivingLonger
      @LivingLonger 18 днів тому +3

      what did you see when the camera man walk into another room? did the beds cover with mattress protectors in the video at 2:02 ? 😆 Did you call the video shown at 3:18 raw foods as dirty foods? 😆what a 'Shocking Slave-Like conditions' ? 😂

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому

      @@elephantintheroom5678 first how do you know wage and passport are withheld? look at the sleeping dorm, put ur self in that position 30 in one rooms.. 1) how are u going to keep your money/passport safe? without it get stolen or lost ?
      2) those food you see there are vegetable no meat are shown in the video, vegetable can last a fewdays NP in these weather

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому +2

      @@LivingLonger 3:18 these are vegetable where the raw meat?

    • @Rex-ww4cw
      @Rex-ww4cw 18 днів тому

      ​@@jetli740he didn't say raw meat. He said raw food

  • @alexrel1
    @alexrel1 15 днів тому

    It seems you are not familiar with Brazil: the labor prosecutor office -Ministerio Público do Trabalho (MPT) - is an independent public body and also very serious and effective.

  • @benjaminchen5715
    @benjaminchen5715 18 днів тому +40

    BYD hired a construction company to build the factory. The construction company operates within a set budget, and the workers are paid a lump sum to complete the job, not an hourly wage. As a result, some workers choose to work 16-20 hours a day, sleep, wake up, and start again the next day without any days off. How many Brazilians would be willing to do this kind of work? This isn’t slave labor-it’s called coolie hard work. People sign up for this kind of job because the alternative is often no better, like signing up for the 'Squid Game.'

    • @ingbor4768
      @ingbor4768 18 днів тому

      "This isn’t slave labor-it’s called coolie hard work. "
      slavery is well established in China and you don't know what you are talking about

    • @nicholaspostlethwaite9554
      @nicholaspostlethwaite9554 18 днів тому +3

      It would be interesting for that to be investigated as I can quite see why those workers would want to do that. Time not working is of no value to them in a remote building site and foreign country. Far better to fill your time. Particularly western workers are so used to easy lives and having it all, they jump on such things as 'bad'.
      Although on a very different level I used to do something similar, I never took time off that I was entitled to as holidays. I could get paid for it as overtime. Most just wasted their time and money having holidays away somewhere, their choice. I retired early!

    • @breft3416
      @breft3416 18 днів тому +7

      That doesn't make it ok, does it?

    • @yunchengzhu-bj2tt
      @yunchengzhu-bj2tt 18 днів тому

      你想过没有 为什么在中国可以这样 中国有工会 但你见过工会维护工人权益吗

    • @liulaolao7269
      @liulaolao7269 17 днів тому +1

      @@yunchengzhu-bj2tt 退休金是工人权益吗? 60歲+免費剩地鐵?

  • @techloidtech2051
    @techloidtech2051 15 днів тому

    Many Brazilians live in Shanties due to sanctions, and many Chinese don't use mattresses preferring to sleep on the floor or firm topper. I'd like to know what the workers thought. Either way I don't see either government taking too kindly to BYD's impropriety.

  • @OneFeather-jk7mp
    @OneFeather-jk7mp 18 днів тому +5

    Well Said ..! Good Man ..!

  • @yenphung8809
    @yenphung8809 18 днів тому

    Fair Sam, thanks for reporting it, I trust you did your homework.

  • @jeditoto3441
    @jeditoto3441 18 днів тому +5

    Byd is sooooooo efficient, VW and EU industry has really trouble catching up with EVs - right Sam?

    • @mk1st
      @mk1st 18 днів тому +2

      BYD started as a battery company that then built cars around said batteries. The others are the other way around, trying to shoehorn EV tech into legacy chassis.

    • @johnsullivan8673
      @johnsullivan8673 18 днів тому

      That’s not BYD, that’s a Chinese construction company

    • @Rex-ww4cw
      @Rex-ww4cw 18 днів тому +1

      It's not even BYD that built the factory. It's the construction company that BYD contracted for

  • @ivandoe33
    @ivandoe33 16 днів тому

    It's the same for LingLong tyre factory in Serbia which is in Europe, not EU, but because of the corruption, government just ignored it even with evidence provided.

  • @firstlast-pt5pp
    @firstlast-pt5pp 18 днів тому +11

    @4:15 - "conditions were brutal" while showing a video of a typical worksite camp/dorm

  • @vutctxcii9442
    @vutctxcii9442 14 днів тому

    Yes, as a local Chinese, this is always happening in past 40 years

  • @jeffschueler1182
    @jeffschueler1182 17 днів тому +8

    Thank you for having the courage to call this outrage out. This is totally unacceptable and cannot continue if BYD wants to succeed anywhere in the world.

    • @robertkirchner7981
      @robertkirchner7981 17 днів тому +1

      I strongly suspect that this is the norm for BYD, and part of the reason BYD is able to out-compete companies that treat their workers better. Many successful companies the world over have similar abuse going on in their backgrounds, obscured through contractual arrangements like this one.

  • @Zerpentsa6598
    @Zerpentsa6598 16 днів тому

    It's not BYD, but a local contractor that was employed to build the plant.

  • @cuteandfunnyearthlings2863
    @cuteandfunnyearthlings2863 18 днів тому +27

    To be honest the working condition in brazil nationwide is slave like.

    • @frankcoffey
      @frankcoffey 18 днів тому +3

      So imagine how bad this is if it even got noticed there?

    • @kamsunleong6648
      @kamsunleong6648 18 днів тому

      ​@@frankcoffey
      It got noticed because it's a Chinese consyruction company and Chinese workers. Not a local company.

    • @bocasuja22
      @bocasuja22 18 днів тому +3

      i am from brasil são Paulo and that is not true.

  • @dragonfly02490
    @dragonfly02490 14 днів тому

    Thanks for speaking up.

  • @COLLAPSE.of.US.ECONOMY
    @COLLAPSE.of.US.ECONOMY 18 днів тому +37

    Hopefully, better living conditions will turn out for these workers. This video reminds me of the millions of homeless people living in the streets of America.

    • @James-v9j1j
      @James-v9j1j 18 днів тому +6

      In America, if you’re homeless, you’ve chosen to be.

    • @bossman6174
      @bossman6174 18 днів тому +2

      The difference is that they are not enslaved. They are just beaten down by the Billionaire class .

    • @olderchin1558
      @olderchin1558 18 днів тому +4

      Coming from South East Asia, these are better conditions than most construction sites in this region. Asian are used to such living conditions or worse in the construction sector.
      If movies are anything to go by, these living quarters appear to be better than life in Brazilian slums.

    • @DorJinTan
      @DorJinTan 18 днів тому

      ​@@olderchin1558exactly. It's v difficult to explain to whytes their privileged positions...

    • @markvalery8632
      @markvalery8632 18 днів тому

      @@James-v9j1j In America, if your are ignorant, you have chosen to be.

  • @Gomummygo
    @Gomummygo 17 днів тому

    This seems very normal tbh. It’s a make shift temp house. I did not have a mattress growing up in China, I had tatami… it’s literally preferred.

  • @VillageIdiot-u2b
    @VillageIdiot-u2b 18 днів тому +3

    FYI Sam, China is NOT selling EVs in Mexico, that are 99% ICE. And I won't be surprised if they turn out to have 60,000 mile engines in them, please correct me if I'm being unreasonable on this point.

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому

      where are the cap to fuel up? if those EV are ice car?

    • @VillageIdiot-u2b
      @VillageIdiot-u2b 18 днів тому

      @@jetli740 I think you are referencing Sam's stock video sequences. There are 14 new brands on the street in Mexico, 30% of all new cars this year. There are virtually zero public chargers in Mexico. 60% of GM cars (all ICE) are made in China by SAIC. I hope this helps. Use AI to easily verify.

    • @VillageIdiot-u2b
      @VillageIdiot-u2b 15 днів тому

      Correction: nearly 12,000 Chinese EVs were sold in Mexico in 2024, so 99% was wrong.

  • @simon-c2y
    @simon-c2y 17 днів тому +1

    I initially thought it might be a fake story, but it clearly is not fake.

  • @titanispi1998
    @titanispi1998 18 днів тому +9

    Salary holback is common in China across all jobs. In China companies use it to keep people working when the conditions would cause them to quit because if you quit the company keeps the money. This can be up to three months pay. It seems like worker exploration is common for them.

    • @LivingLonger
      @LivingLonger 18 днів тому +1

      what did you see when the camera man walk into another room? did the beds cover with mattress protectors in the video at 2:02 ? 😆 Did you call the video shown at 3:18 raw foods as dirty foods? 😆what a 'Shocking Slave-Like conditions' ? 😂

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому

      tell me where you think those worker keep their money/passport safe?

    • @doomslayer4276
      @doomslayer4276 17 днів тому

      ​@@jetli740is that an excuse?

  • @jding1573
    @jding1573 16 днів тому

    I read a news that these workers are paid around US$2000 a month, much high salary than Brazilian local standard, so I dont believe the contractor will force the workers to work in bad environment. Also about the passport held, it is because that the contractor is preparing for some legal documents.
    No Chinese is willing to work in Brazil if their pay /working condition are not attractive.
    About working 7 days a week, that's normal if you want to finish the project earlier and if the workers are willing to do with extra money.

  • @Marcus-c5d
    @Marcus-c5d 18 днів тому +8

    Hi buddy, I am Brazilian, live in this country and yes, I confirm this is thuth, largely showed on TV, rádio and etc...

    • @HughJass-313
      @HughJass-313 17 днів тому +1

      As a Brazilian,
      can you tell me IF the Factory they are building.... WILL have BRAZILIANS Working there?
      Or will the Factory still be run by Chinese workers afterward?

    • @Davecooperify
      @Davecooperify 17 днів тому

      @@HughJass-313 Vis his/her/its channel. All your questions will be answered.

    • @Marcus-c5d
      @Marcus-c5d 16 днів тому +1

      They will be Brazilian workers but with a Chinese minority, as is already the case with other vehicle manufacturers.

    • @Marcus-c5d
      @Marcus-c5d 16 днів тому +1

      As reported, this plant was built by Ford, which stopped manufacturing in Brazil and was somehow sold to BYD, this place is called Camaçari and is an important petrochemical hub in the state called Bahia.

  • @chaz4609
    @chaz4609 17 днів тому

    Jai Hind. We Indians must be always vigilant to prevent such working conditions of scam centres and BYD in Myanmar, Laos, Philippines, Brazil and China etc. to become a New normal for our Indian construction and industrial workers. We know for instance that Indian construction workers' working conditions at construction sites in the Middle East Gulf region are not ideal but authorities had normally turned a blind eye.

  • @optimal9094
    @optimal9094 18 днів тому +3

    Quick, after appreciating China products this YTer has to report on a BBC article, a new channel that has a track record of honesty.

  • @Whitfield369
    @Whitfield369 17 днів тому

    This is the first time I come to be aware of this kind of news. I think you are expressing an honest opinion. Not just BYD, but the Chinese government should take the responsibility of such horrific conducts from a Chinese firm. This can ruin all the good will and effort and reputation of BYD and China. Those did this should be jailed. It really does not take that much to provide decent living and working conditions for the workers. Hearing how extravagant many of those rich tycoons live, it may just cost a night of drinking to make these workers' lives much better!

  • @youxkio
    @youxkio 18 днів тому +8

    Thank you for the unbiased news, Sam. Great value!!!

  • @TonyGrant.
    @TonyGrant. 17 днів тому

    Sam, unions in australia gave us the 8 hour day and 40 hour week - that means they also gave us the weekends and so much more. That's not to say that unions are 100% good but there are many things people take for granted that are due to unions.

  • @radiyap
    @radiyap 18 днів тому +3

    growing up in hot and humid Singapore, we did not have mattress... slept on mat

  • @changliu3915
    @changliu3915 18 днів тому +3

    Dude if you look at migrant worker dormitories in China, it looks exactly the same. This is pretty common in China, to call it slave like is a bit of a stretch . Take me for example, who was born in early 80s, despite the fact I am doing well and have a nice house with nice mattresses having lived through the poverty of the 80s I won't bat an eyelid if conditions shone in the videos is what I got, as long as there is a payoff at the end. Guess we are just made of tougher stuff. Same can't be said for the post 00s generations though hahaha.

  • @wedmunds
    @wedmunds 18 днів тому +1

    Brazil needs to do something about this. China is very strict on workplace conditions now.

  • @joshuaw2143
    @joshuaw2143 18 днів тому +27

    Bro shocked that slave conditions exist in a country with actual slavery 😂

    • @elephantintheroom5678
      @elephantintheroom5678 18 днів тому +8

      America has slavery, too.

    • @minborox
      @minborox 18 днів тому

      There is no slavery in China. The Uyghur stuff is just overblown nonsense by the media.

    • @abzulooks6012
      @abzulooks6012 18 днів тому

      @@JeDxDeVu They have slavery by proxy. And now, every race gets to play.

    • @markc6140
      @markc6140 17 днів тому +2

      Think the modern workers should stay in 5-star hotels then.

    • @InformatikasDiagnoze
      @InformatikasDiagnoze 17 днів тому

      ​@@elephantintheroom5678 But not officially. ;) China officially use forced labor for convicts. That's one of The reasons of cheap prices.

  • @captives6479
    @captives6479 17 днів тому +4

    The foreign labor workers in Taiwan (Pinoys, Viet, Indo) also have their passports held either by the factories or by their agents. It's pretty normal. Nothing wrong with that.

  • @ricguers
    @ricguers 16 днів тому

    Just a clarification... Brazil might have a history of human rights violations, but it's also true that we have some of the toughest labor legislation in the world. Proof of that is that the government did step in and closed the plant

  • @GeraldoeFlavia34
    @GeraldoeFlavia34 18 днів тому +3

    I am brazilian, my country criminalize work. This is never a "Slave", but exist a criminal court to accuse who creates jobs here. Its a shame how Brazil manage this issue. Its a LIE.

    • @DorJinTan
      @DorJinTan 18 днів тому

      U're clear headed.

    • @maheus3451
      @maheus3451 17 днів тому +1

      I agree but as a brazilian too, I think BYD should be able to make a better example and I am a pro-brics enthusiast.

    • @DorJinTan
      @DorJinTan 17 днів тому

      @@maheus3451 Agreed

    • @newdoors5415
      @newdoors5415 14 днів тому

      这是美国靠先发优势给发展中国家强迫灌输的价值观,目的是让发展中国家长期内耗,阻止国家经济快速发展,直至任何国家都无法挑战美国的地位

    • @morganrv
      @morganrv 12 днів тому

      No, it doesn’t. Unfortunately some of the “elites” in Brazil never made peace with the fact that slavery was abolished in 1888 (last country in the Americas to do so).

  • @DynesLair-kb6qs
    @DynesLair-kb6qs 17 днів тому

    I had work training about labor trafficking and unfortunately sounds nearly identical to the example story used in the training. A big factor or clue specifically mentioned by the training was restriction of access to passports. And withheld wages as well as contract termination fees to the worker. All of these I believe are listed as human rights abuses. I hope that BYD chooses to pay very careful attention from now on and tries to do the right thing. Great products but there's absolutely no need for any of this. There's a difference between accelerating progress and cutting corners. They can have dangerous unforseen consequences and leave people suffering. My prayers for all affected. Unfortunately even today this continues to be an all too common issue among supply chains.

  • @darthkek1953
    @darthkek1953 18 днів тому +2

    I haven't been this shocked since I wired my knackers up to the 220v socket. I mean, WHO'D HAVE THOUGHT IT?

  • @rick-zee
    @rick-zee 18 днів тому +1

    Hey want to reconsider buying a Zeekr man? Do you know the human cost how it was built?

  • @gideonlee6244
    @gideonlee6244 18 днів тому +3

    This could be real. This could also be nothing.
    1. It doesn't take much to remove the mattresses before the photo op.
    2. Brazil has millions squatting in worse conditions. Strange that they should be concerned about these 100+ workers
    3. Sleeping without mattresses isn't really uncommon in many parts of Asia. Wealthy Chinese have been using rosewood for beds N chairs without cushions for centuries. Vietnamese, Thai and Bangladeshi also do not always have problems sleeping on hard floors. Some really do prefer the floor to the cushions claiming it doesn't give them back pain. Even in millionaire Singapore, many of us prefer the floor to our sofas and still like squatting toilets more than the seated ones. Doesn't make us slaves. The List of examples of cultural differences can go on.
    4. Getting some official and calling some journalists to throw eggs at BYD or China isn't really a difficult task in Brazil.
    5. The workers who were rescued will be the ones who need to agree if they were enslaved. Ie no pay etc. Difficult for us to say if it's slavery or not.

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому

      100% spot on
      add the video state the food keep unrefrigerated, NO raw meat show only vegetable., Vegetable can last unrefrigerated for days....
      so another false report in the video

    • @AdamOHalloran
      @AdamOHalloran 18 днів тому

      Yes, it’s international news because it’s a false flag.
      Are you one of these people who attempt to debunk the moon landing on Facebook too?

    • @AdamOHalloran
      @AdamOHalloran 18 днів тому

      @@jetli740and let’s face it, if it wasn’t on the video, it didn’t happen.

    • @jiaao86
      @jiaao86 18 днів тому

      你给他们说那么多没用的,他们理解不了。要透过现象看本质,1.巴西的政治制度在那里摆着,总统和劳工部不一定是都是一派,博纳索罗背后是谁难道不知道吗。2.中国汽车现在这么火,谁的利益受损最大,在俄罗斯不是也有这种情况吗。3.比亚迪是现在才出海吗,是现在才在巴西开工厂吗?这个工厂3月25日就动工了,为什么偏偏这个时候才来查和曝光这种事?4.南美的腐败全世界不知道吗?5.中国人对待工作的方式其他国家的人是不能理解的。

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 18 днів тому

      @@AdamOHalloran first if you make claim then you must have evidence.
      i see too many hole in the video, why so short not show the bathroom?
      and question is what is a bathroom? you expect it like we have in our home? this is a construction site not a 5 star hotel

  • @Rex-ww4cw
    @Rex-ww4cw 18 днів тому +1

    People needs to know that it's not BYD that does this. It's the construction companies that BYD contracted for that did this. Same logic as how you should go after Foxconn, the one that actually manufacture Apple product than going after Apple. Lots of times all these companies don't actually know the management of their contractors just from the outside.

  • @Infodawg2012
    @Infodawg2012 18 днів тому +6

    Shame on BYD. What is the point of making so much money when you treat workers so badly. Shame on you, horrible company.

  • @captainjayc9217
    @captainjayc9217 17 днів тому +1

    Actually this makes sense for the employer to keep the passport of the employee when they work in a foreign country. Passport is an important document. You cannot simply leave it in your backpack and leave it in the dorm room. You cannot simply lock it in a locker with a flimsy $1 lock either. You need to lock it up very good in a "safe". And the chance is very good that the employee is not going to spend the money to buy a proper safe to lock his passport. That's why the employer has to keep the passport of the employee. No surprise here.

  • @nadavbenmordechay
    @nadavbenmordechay 18 днів тому +6

    Well done sam . Very important

  • @jeremytok
    @jeremytok 17 днів тому

    In Southern China, people sleep on wooden boards with a thin grass mat on it. It’s seen as a healthier bed than Western style mattresses.

  • @GlobalDrifter1000
    @GlobalDrifter1000 18 днів тому +7

    I feel confident that none of these workers had mattresses at home

    • @cb250nighthawk3
      @cb250nighthawk3 17 днів тому +1

      I'm in S. E. Asia. I do have a bed and 6" spring mattress to sleep in but sometimes I prefer to sleep on my reclining chair. It's way more cooling.😂😂😂

    • @GlobalDrifter1000
      @GlobalDrifter1000 17 днів тому +1

      @ older than old.

  • @byram101
    @byram101 16 днів тому

    Sadly as An English teacher in Taiwan I can attest to the fact that most factory workers and care givers from South E Asia and other areas have their passports confiscated by brokers and employers to that they cannot leave. It is really rampant and really sad.

  • @RuggedGoodLooks
    @RuggedGoodLooks 18 днів тому +7

    Good on you for calling em out