Chinese
employees at Microsoft's Nokia arm protest mass layoffs
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[August 01, 2014]
BEIJING (Reuters) - "Hundreds"
of Chinese employees at Microsoft Corp's Nokia phone business
protested on Friday against mass layoffs that the U.S. tech company
announced last month, according to an employee present and pictures
posted on social media networks. |
Protesters held banners and shouted slogans against "Microsoft's
hostile takeover and violent layoffs" for five hours until "they had
sore throats," said the employee who participated in the
demonstration and so declined to be identified.
The protesters would convene on Friday afternoon to discuss demands
they would present to the company, the employee said.
Microsoft announced on July 17 the deepest job cuts in its 39-year
history, amounting to 18,000 positions. Microsoft said up to 12,500
of those jobs would come from Nokia, the Finnish handset maker it
bought in April in a $7.2 billion friendly takeover.
The protests took place at a Beijing research center and factory
employing 2,400 people, according to a statement from organizers,
and amounted to the latest in a string of troubles for the U.S.
software giant in China.
Microsoft offices in four cities were raided this week by Chinese
authorities as part of an ongoing anti-monopoly investigation
announced on Tuesday.
More broadly, labor disputes have risen across China over the past
year in tandem with a slowdown in growth in the world's No. 2
economy.
Since taking the helm of Microsoft in February, Chief Executive
Satya Nadella has pledged to slim down his company to compete with
nimbler internet-based rivals.
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Microsoft earlier this year said it would make changes company-wide
within 18 months of closing the Nokia acquisition that would lead to
costs-savings of up to $600 million per year.
The latest cuts, which will be completed by June 30, 2015, represent
about 14 percent of Microsoft's worldwide workforce.
A Microsoft spokeswoman declined to provide immediate comment by
telephone and did not respond to questions by e-mail.
(Reporting by Gerry Shih, Paul Carsten and Beijing Newsroom; Editing
by Christopher Cushing)
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