Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Chinese Company Forces Employees to Eat Live Worms for Not Meeting Sales Target

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Nov, 2016 03:03 PM
    Chinese companies have been known to subject their employees to some of the most unusual and degrading punishments imaginable, but this latest one takes the cake. 
     
    According to recent new reports, a company Hanzhong, Shaanxi province, decided to punish who failed to meet their sales targets by feeding them a disgusting cocktail of baijou liquor and live mealworms.
     
    The degrading punishment was reportedly carried out in in a plaza in downtown Hanzhong, where 60 company employees were summoned for an outdoor meeting. 
     
    Witnesses took to the internet to report that the group of young workers was approached by a man carrying bags of live mealworms, who proceeded to pick various numbers of them with chopsticks and drop them in plastic cups full of baijou. Employees who had failed to reach their sales quota were asked to step forward and drink the gag-inducing cocktail.
     
    Five or six poor-performing employees were reportedly asked to drink the worm-infested baijou in front of their colleagues. One of the employees, who chose to remain anonymous, later told the Huashang Daily newspaper that each of the "offending" workers had to swallow four worms for every client they lost.
     
    One of the recipients of the brutal punishment was a pregnant woman, who refused to drink the cocktail for fear of losing the pregnancy. "I can't eat worms now, I can't drink either, unless I don't want my baby," she reportedly told the sales manager. Eventually, a male colleague received the cruel punishment on her behalf.
     
     
    Photos of the bizarre event taken by passers-by quickly went viral on the Chinese social media, and sparked the anger of millions of users. The company that staged the punishment was soon identified as Ai Jia, a sales group formed by 10 construction companies. A man surnamed Cao, the owner of a bathroom equipment company part of Ai Jia group acknowledged the punishment, but added that the employees were 'willing to receive it'.
     
    Emboldened by the media coverage and the outrage of the general public, another employee of Ai Jia came forward and reported that Every morning, employees of the group set a business target for the day, and if they fail to hit it, they receive various punishments the following day.
     
    "Other than worms, we have also eaten live squid and ants before," he said.
     
    Despite the huge backlash, another Ai Jia company owner maintained that the punishment was actually just "a special form of encouragement".
     
    According to the article 88 of China's employment contract law, employers are not allowed to humiliate or physically harm their workers, and the labor inspection bureau of Hanzhong city told the Huashang Daily that forcing people to eat live worms definitely counts as a violation of the law. They also urged employees subjected to the cruel punishment to report the incident to the local labor department.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Michelle Obama In Passenger Seat For 'Carpool Karaoke'

    WASHINGTON — Who will be next in the passenger seat for an upcoming edition of "Carpool Karaoke" with late-night comic James Corden?

    Michelle Obama In Passenger Seat For 'Carpool Karaoke'

    Summer Heat Wave May Be Reason For Winter Deaths Of Endangered Marmot Species

    Summer Heat Wave May Be Reason For Winter Deaths Of Endangered Marmot Species
    NANAIMO, B.C. — Experts monitoring the critically endangered Vancouver Island marmot say three dozen of the animals have died over the winter in the central island region of Strathcona.

    Summer Heat Wave May Be Reason For Winter Deaths Of Endangered Marmot Species

    Rescue Flight Leaves South Pole With Sick Workers; Canadian-Owned Plane Used

    Rescue Flight Leaves South Pole With Sick Workers; Canadian-Owned Plane Used
    CALGARY — A Canadian-owned Twin Otter turboprop plane left the South Pole on Wednesday with two sick workers in a rescue mission from a remote U.S. science outpost, federal officials said.

    Rescue Flight Leaves South Pole With Sick Workers; Canadian-Owned Plane Used

    Death Of Sea Stars In Howe Sound Reveals Ecological Domino Effect

    Death Of Sea Stars In Howe Sound Reveals Ecological Domino Effect
    VANCOUVER — A mass die-off off of sea stars in British Columbia's Howe Sound appears to be causing a significant change in the ecology of the waterway north of Vancouver.

    Death Of Sea Stars In Howe Sound Reveals Ecological Domino Effect

    Click Here When I Die: Sites Lay Out Plans For Loved Ones

    Click Here When I Die: Sites Lay Out Plans For Loved Ones
    NEW YORK — Several websites are trying to make death easier -- for the people left behind.

    Click Here When I Die: Sites Lay Out Plans For Loved Ones

    Riding Segway's Hoverboard Is Like Skiing On LA's Streets

    Riding Segway's Hoverboard Is Like Skiing On LA's Streets
    LOS ANGELES — A new self-balancing electric scooter from Segway grows on you. Like a comfortable pair of shoes, it takes you places, but on wheels.

    Riding Segway's Hoverboard Is Like Skiing On LA's Streets