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Nokia may make Chennai plant a contract manufacturing unit

With Finnish handset maker Nokia stating that the $7.2-billion deal with IT major Microsoft for sale of its mobile devices and services business might conclude by this week, the Chennai plant could become a contract manufacturing facility.
Nokia had on Monday said it expects the deal to conclude on 25 April and hoped it would continue to operate the Chennai plant under a ‘service agreement’.

The plant at Sriperumbudur near Chennai is one of Nokia's biggest facilities in the world, employing about 8,000 persons directly and about 12,000 indirectly.

‘With Chennai, it is worth remembering that we have said we will consider a services agreement with Microsoft should our Indian assets not be able to transfer at the close of the global deal,’ a Nokia spokesperson said.A Nokia official had earlier said the company was still exploring the option of operating the plant by getting into a ‘services agreement’, which would make it a contract manufacturer for other companies.

The employees, backed by the Nokia India Thozhilalargal Sangam (Nokia India Employees Union) are apprehensive over the move of converting it into contract manufacturing, alleging that there may be a substantial reduction in manpower.
Last year the employees had resorted to a strike and impleaded themselves in a petition before Delhi High Court, stating that considering their future, the Chennai plant should be included in the Nokia-Microsoft deal.

However, due to the tax dispute faced by Nokia India and the deal between Nokia and Microsoft set to complete in few days, the Chennai plant is likely to be excluded from the deal.

On 14 March, the Supreme Court had ordered Nokia India to give Rs 3,500 crore as guarantee before it transfers the plant to Microsoft.
Besides, the Tamil Nadu Government also slammed Rs 2,400 crore on Nokia, saying the company had been selling products from the Chennai plant in domestic market instead of shipping overseas.

According to Nokia India Employees Union Honorary President, A Soundararajan, the Chennai plant, which produces about one million mobile handsets per day, saw a steep decline and that production now stood at just 0.4 million handsets.Recently, the company offered a Voluntary Retirement Scheme to employees in Chennai and about 700 trainees are learnt to have opted for it.
Employees at the Chennai plant abstained from using the canteen services on Monday in protest against the recently announced VRS, which they allege is being forced on them.Nokia India Employees Union Advisor, Udhayakumar, alleged that the company had not announced any clear stand to them or anything related to Chennai plant.

‘I understand Nokia has been issuing statements about the deal with Microsoft. The employees have been resorting to various forms of agitation like one-day strike in March. But so far Nokia has not cleared its stand on the fate of the Chennai plant’, he said.
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