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News / Business

Apple checks claim that iPhone killed Chinese user

The Columbian
Published: July 15, 2013, 5:00pm

Apple said Monday that it will investigate claims that an iPhone may have electrocuted and killed a 23-year-old woman in western China, only months after the company’s warranty policies attracted the ire of Chinese media and regulatory groups.

China’s state-run Xinhua News Agency reported over the weekend that Ma Ailun, a former flight attendant, died after answering a call on a charging iPhone. The report — along with the social-media postings of Ma’s relatives — quickly went viral in China, the second-largest market for Apple iPhones. A local investigator told the Wall Street Journal that the woman suffered “an obvious electronic injury.”

“We are deeply saddened to learn of this tragic incident and offer our condolences to the Ma family,” Apple said in a statement. “We will fully investigate and cooperate with authorities in this matter.”

The company declined to elaborate on the incident or what may have caused it. It is unclear whether the phone was to blame. China’s consumer safety agency has warned of an electrocution risk from unregulated mobile-phone chargers, which are common in China.

This year, Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook issued an apology and changed Apple’s warranty policy after a lengthy assault by the Chinese media, which called the policy unfair.

And reports of abuse and unfair labor conditions at Apple suppliers remain a salient issue in China, said Michael Palma, a consumer electronics analyst at market intelligence firm IDC.

“The Apple brand still carries the value in China that it carries in the U.S.,” Palma said. “But preserving that image is what’s driving Apple’s quick response — they’ve been very proactive in trying to demonstrate that they’re concerned” about Chinese consumers.

Until recently, China was perhaps best known as a supplier, not a consumer, of luxury tech products such as the iPhone.

But in the past fiscal year, China, Taiwan and Hong Kong accounted for 14 percent of Apple’s global sales, and that share is expected to grow, said Brian Colello, an analyst at Morningstar. China is the world’s largest smartphone market.

None of those brands have been immune to these types of incidents. Colello pointed out that last week, a woman in the United Arab Emirates complained that her Samsung Galaxy S4 caught fire while charging overnight.

“These types of stories tend to pop up when there are tens, if not hundreds, of millions of devices used by consumers,” he said.

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