Friday, February 1, 2008

HBV Discrimination in Nokia China Continues

Please read a report from FT.com first.

Nokia China hit with discrimination suit
By Mure Dickie

Published: March 13 2007 21:30 | Last updated: March 13 2007 21:30

A Chinese job applicant -on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against Nokia alleging that a local unit of the Finnish telecommunications equipment company refused to employ him because he is a carrier of the Hepatitis B virus.

The highly unusual lawsuit underscores moves by Hepatitis B carriers to use legal channels to challenge what they say is endemic discrimination against the estimated 120m Chinese infected by the virus.

Chinese companies routinely refuse to employ people who carry the Hepatitis B virus, even though it is mainly transmitted at birth, through sexual contact or by contaminated needles.

However, the job applicant, who asked to be identified only by his surname, Li, said he had been surprised when the Nokia unit in China’s southern city of Dongguan cancelled plans to hire him after a company-ordered medical examination.

“I thought that as a big company, Nokia would have a better understanding of this issue,” Mr Li said. “But they still said that because I was a [Hepatitis B] carrier, they had to reject me.”

Mr Li on Tuesday filed a lawsuit at a Dongguan court calling on it to order Nokia to hire him and to pay Rmb500,000 ($64,540, £33,370, €48,830) in compensation for “mental suffering”.

Nokia stressed its global policy did not allow hiring decisions to be affected by whether an applicant was suffering from a chronic disease, such as Hepatitis B, unless the condition would render the employee incapable or would pose “considerable risk” to others.

“We are looking into this case,” said Thomas J?nsson, director of communications for Nokia China. “If a mistake has been committed, we will follow up and take whatever measures are required to correct it.”

Mr Li’s case has emerged at a time when a growing number of Chinese are taking companies and even government departments to court over issues such as discrimination. Such litigants often face laws that are ambiguous, courts that rule inconsistently and patchy enforcement of rulings.

Lu Jun, a health activist who runs a website for Hepatitis B carriers, said Mr Li’s lawsuit appeared to be the first of its kind against a western company. Anti-discrimination lawsuits against local companies were also very rare and often failed, in part because of China’s contradictory legislation on Hepatitis B, Mr Lu said.

Officially, discrimination against Hepatitis B victims is banned under a sweeping but vaguely worded 2004 law and the health ministry says carriers can live, work and study “normally”. However, those infected with the virus are banned by official regulations from working in sectors such as the food industry and are sometimes blacklisted even by government departments.

Last year, a top school in China’s northwestern Xinjiang region expelled 19 children after discovering they were infected with the virus.

A lawsuit brought by parents of the children against local education authorities was abandoned under what people familiar with the situation said was heavy pressure from officials.

Unlike the less serious but more infectious Hepatitis A virus, Hepatitis B carriers pose little risk to co-workers or fellow students.

But fear of the disease, which leaves most carriers unharmed but can cause serious liver damage and death, has been stoked in China by widespread advertising by medicine vendors.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/85791c1c-d1a6-11db-b921-000b5df10621.html

After the suit, Nokia China changed its policy on blood test in health exams. Below is a quotation from an internal letter:

"According to relevant government regulations regarding the employment rights of Hepatitis B virus (HBV) carriers and Nokia's global policy that chronic disease can not form a part in hiring decisions, Nokia China will stop requiring Hepatitis serological indicator tests in health exams during new employee recruiting process starting from August 27th 2007. "

Today I got a message that HBV discrimination in Nokia China is continuing.

A HBV carrier, whose net name is scnydx, applied a position in Nokia unit in China's southern city of Dongguan. Since scnydx had read the internal letter before, he thought HBV carrying won't be a problem anymore when applying a position in Nokia. Yesterday(Jan 31, 2008) during the interview, he told the interviewer that he is a HBV carrier. When the interviewer was informed that the interviewee is a HBV carrier, the interviewer suddenly called the interview an end. So surprise and angry was scnydx, he called the HR manager whose surname is Qin (秦) that what they'd done flouted the China Employment Promotion Law and Global Policy by Nokia headquarter, the HR manager replied he didn't get any notice from Nokia headquarter about HBV carriers' policy.

Human Resource Department of Nokia Unit in Dongguan (东莞)
HR Manager: Qin
Phone: (0769)26907417

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Could you try to contact BBC or discoverry channel which always makes recording movie (or somethingelse) for telling them the truth of HBV discrimination in China? They may invest to produce a Documentary in the human rights of chinese society especially about HBV discrimination. This is not to fight against chinese government ,just because we have no other choices to warn the numb chinese. You konw Documentaries made by these two giant scientific media are usually having great TV ratings .This perhaps helps the people longing disturbed by the HBV discrimination and this may save you,save me,save chinese society,even save the humanity! Thanks a lot for having done so much in order to change the situation of Chinese human rights!

Anonymous said...

yes mine similar with u.
just keep going!

HBVers in China said...

Thanks for your comments.

I'm a huge fan of BBC documentary and your suggestion sounds reasonable. However, is it feasible? I have no appropriate channel to contract any BBC journalist. Is there anyone who can tell me how to contact them, or any other indie documentary producer out there?

Drop me an email if you have any suggestions.

ZZQ said...

i am a hbv-carrier too.
who can help us?
i want to go abroad!

HBVers in China said...

to zzq:

Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for yourself!

If you want to go abroad, find out how to and try your best to achieve your dream.

MATINA said...

I was diagnosed as HEPATITIS B carrier in 2013 with fibrosis of the
liver already present. I started on antiviral medications which
reduced the viral load initially. After a couple of years the virus
became resistant. I started on HEPATITIS B Herbal treatment from
ULTIMATE LIFE CLINIC (www.ultimatelifeclinic.com) in March, 2020. Their
treatment totally reversed the virus. I did another blood test after
the 6 months long treatment and tested negative to the virus. Amazing
treatment! This treatment is a breakthrough for all HBV carriers.