Affichage des articles dont le libellé est toilet water. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est toilet water. Afficher tous les articles

jeudi 8 novembre 2018

Sick Men of Asia

Chinese staff forced to drink urine and eat roaches
BBC News

If you miss your sales target, bon appétit

Managers at a Chinese firm have been jailed for making staff who failed to reach sales targets drink urine and eat cockroaches, local media report.
Police took action after videos emerged showing workers being whipped with a belt and drinking a yellow liquid.
Social media posts alleged staff were also told to eat cockroaches if they did not meet targets.
Three managers were jailed for five and 10 days over the incident, the South China Morning Post reports.
A widely-shared video posted on Chinese social media site Weibo shows a male employee standing in the middle of a circle, getting whipped with a belt.
The video quickly went viral on Weibo

Other staff, said to be employees of the home renovation company in the city of Guizhou, can be seen drinking yellow liquid from plastic cups while holding their noses.
Screenshots of what were said to be messages from the managers threaten staff that they will have to eat cockroaches for poor performances.
According to media reports, other forms of shaming and punishment at the firm have included drinking toilet water or vinegar and getting their head shaved.
The yellow liquid was urine

The company had failed to pay their employees' salary for the past two months and staff was scared to speak up fearing they would lose the pay if they'd quit.
Police in Zunyi county police arrested three managers and they were later sentenced to jail time.
It's the latest in a string of cases of Chinese firms employing unusual measures to punish, shame or encourage their staff.
Previous reports have alleged cases of employees slapping each other at a company event to boost motivation, and staff forced to crawl on a public road or kiss rubbish bins as a punishment or for team building.

samedi 30 décembre 2017

Traditional Chinese Hygiene

China's hotel cleaning crews caught using toilet brushes to clean drinkware
By Michael Bartiromo

An undercover investigation revealed the cringe-worthy cleaning practices at the Sheraton (above), the Kempinski and the Shangri-La hotels in Harbin. 

Forget about bedbugs or mysterious stains — some of the practices at a trio of Chinese hotels are far more disturbing.
The cleaning crews at three high-end hotels in northern China were caught using several less-than-sanitary methods to clean their guests’ rooms, including scrubbing out mugs with a toilet brush, washing the bathroom floors with toilet water, and folding clean towels on the bathroom floor.
Hidden-camera footage of the incidents was shared to the Chinese streaming site Pear Video on Tuesday, and confirmed to be genuine by the city of Harbin’s department of tourism, the South China Morning Post reports.
The offending hotels include the Kempinski Hotel Harbin, the Harbin Shangri-La Hotel and the Sheraton Harbin Xiangfang Hotel, all of which are located in Harbin, the capital city of the Heilongjiang province in northwest China.
Each hotel has also been fined by the city and told to correct the issue, the Post adds.
The Shangri-La has since stated that it plans to “cooperate with local government to properly implement all hygiene measures,” and also vowed to conduct its own investigation into the staff’s practices.
“If what was shown in the video was proved to be true, it would be a serious violation of our hygiene standards and it would not be acceptable,” a representative of the hotel told the Post.
The Kempinski Hotel Harbin has called the cleaning habits “unacceptable,” and confirmed that the Kempinksi worker shown in the video had been fired, The Sun reports. 
The Sheraton, too, has since addressed the video, writing that it is "deeply sorry" for the actions of its cleaners, which the hotel re-trained on Wednesday, according to Beijing-based media outlet Caixin.
The footage, which was reportedly shot by an undercover journalist for Pear Video, had also revealed a number of cringe-worthy cleaning methods. 
Among other nasty practices, these included: cleaning drinkware and a bathroom sink with a toilet brush, then immediately using the same brush to clean a toilet; dipping a towel into toilet water before using it to scrub the floor; using a single rag to clean glassware, a garbage can and the toilet bowl; and folding blankets and towels on the floors of the rooms.
The undercover reporter had even asked one of the hotel’s workers if the rest of the cleaning staff used the same practices, and was told that they did, but that “We just never talk about it,” the Independent reports.
According to the South China Post, rooms at the three hotels range from about $105 to $410 per night.