Zhang Shuhong

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Zhang Shuhong (Chinese: 张树鸿, 1957 – 11 August 2007) was a Chinese businessman and factory owner. Zhang committed suicide after toys made at his factory for Fisher-Price (a division of Mattel) were found to contain lead paint.[1]

Personal life

Zhang Shuhong grew up in Hong Kong. He first worked as an errand boy for a Hong Kong factory.[2] He eventually moved to Guangdong province, just across the border from Hong Kong, to work in the toy factories which grew up in the area in the 1980s and 1990s. He never married.[2]

Lee Der Industrial

Zhang Shuhong worked at the

equipment.[2] According to Lee Der employees, Zhang was planning to move one of his three factories to a new US$5 million plant that had recently been completed.[2] Zhang was reportedly devoted to the Lee Der Industrial company.[2]
He resided on the factory grounds in a 25-square-meter room for the 10 years before his death to be close to his work.
subsidiaries, which were named Hengjing
and Shuaimeng.[1]

2007 Mattel toy recall and suicide

On 2 August 2007,

Toys R Us and Walmart.[1]

The Mattel Company sent investigators to China. Mattel identified Lee Der Industrial company as the main supplier of the lead paint tainted toys.[3] China immediately suspended the company's export license which had a devastating effect on the company's business.[3] According to press reports, Lee Der Industrial stood to lose as much as $30 million due to the Fisher-Price toy recall scandal.[3]

Mattel tracked down three paint suppliers who worked for the Lee Der company – Dongxin, Zhongxin and Mingdai.[2] Each of these three companies had supplied paint to factories which were contracted to make Mattel products, including Fisher-Price.

Mattel believes that specifically, the Mingdai company sold yellow paint pigment containing lead to Dongxin and Zhongxin, which produced the paint.[2] The paint was then used by Lee Der, operated by Zhang Shuhong, to produce Mattel's line of Fisher-Price products.

It is believed that a personal friend of Zhang's ran the company who supplied the lead paint, which ultimately led to the Mattel recall and the financial ruin of Lee Der Industrial. It has been speculated that Zhang Shuhong felt demoralised by the scandal[2] and possibly betrayed by a close friend. Whether or not Zhang knew of the lead paint before the recall is unknown.[2]

Zhang spent the morning of 11 August 2007, talking to some of Lee Der Industrial's 5,000 employees[3] encouraging them to look for other jobs.[2] He also told his managers to sell the factory's equipment.[2] Zhang then apparently hanged himself on the third floor of one of his factories later that day. According to The New York Times, Zhang was 52 at the time of his death.[2] A funeral was held for Zhang Shuhong on 17 August in the factory yard of the Lee Der company.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Cody, Edward (14 August 2007). "Chinese Toy Executive Found Hanged After Export Ban". The Washington Post. Retrieved 26 August 2007.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Barboza, David (23 August 2007). "Scandal and Suicide in China: A Dark Side of Toys". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 August 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Watts, Jonathan (14 August 2007). "Boss in Chinese toy scandal kills himself". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 August 2007.