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another bad news for the yaosiu devils day!

sochi2014

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Real-life Halloween scare: Chocolate prices are set to rise

Rising costs for chocolate manufacturers and increasing global demand will raise chocolate prices.
 

sochi2014

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Once a showpiece of foreign investment, the factory at Sriperumbudur, about 45 km from Chennai, now looks like a ghost entity. For the around 30,000 workers, 31 October will forever be Black Friday as Nokia officially shutdowns its plant in the state, nine years after it entered India.

Nokia's closure will be the first major wind up by a multinational after the Narendra Modi government took charge in May.

S Arun and three of his friends, who worked at the plant, gathered in front of the factory, both sad and dejected.

"We lost everything, our education, our youth, our life," says Arun, who joined the factory after discontinuing his degree.

His friend Vinodth says that he joined the plant for its brand value, hoping that it will provide a secure life. "Today we are left with nothing, no education, no job, no income and no respect in the family," he says.

The eligibility criteria for joining the plant was 60% at the Higher Secondary level and a transfer certificate. Hence, many like Arun and Vinodth joined the plant, giving up plans for higher education.

Another worker Prabhu says the government, both at the Centre and the state, failed them. So did the court and Indian-born CEOs of Microsoft and Nokia, Satya Nadella and Rajeev Suri respectively.

"We are the orphans," said these workers on Union Minister for law, telecom and Information Technology Ravi Shankar Prasad's statement that government couldn't save Nokia Chennai from becoming an orphan.

These young men are among the over 30,000 people who were dependant on the factory for their livelihood. The factory employed around 8,000 people directly, over 50% of which were women. The average age of the workers was around 25.
Counting the vendors, who were solely dependant on this facility, and other indirect workers the number of people affected comes to over 30,000.

"If you take away Nokia and the years we spent here, we have nothing as our background. All of us are from a poor background and a majority are from rural areas,” said another employee Saravana Kumar.

Rajan (name changed), aged 27, said, “I fear about how I will take care of the family now."

Many horror and sad stories can be heard in villages in the 100-km radius around the plant. The Sriperumbudur plant was the most productive for Nokia globally, beating even its Chinese plant.

In 2005, the then chief minister J Jayalalithaa proudly announced that her government has convinced Nokia to set up a facility in the state. But the state government did not come to the rescue of the factory, blaming the Centre for its closure. Nor did the Central government despite several petitions from the workers.

Established in 2006 over a 200-acre site, Nokia wheeled out the 'Made for India' 1100 model and then slowly ramped up production to make Chennai its single largest unit for handsets globally. Nokia and its suppliers had invested over Rs 1,800 crore in their facilities.

The plant's cumulative production was 800 million handsets. Nokia would export phones worth more than $2 billion a year. Nokia India's overall turnover totalled Rs 151,000 crore between 2005/06 and 2011/12.
 

kezgtree

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Once a showpiece of foreign investment, the factory at Sriperumbudur, about 45 km from Chennai, now looks like a ghost entity. For the around 30,000 workers, 31 October will forever be Black Friday as Nokia officially shutdowns its plant in the state, nine years after it entered India.

Nokia's closure will be the first major wind up by a multinational after the Narendra Modi government took charge in

S Arun and three of his friends, who worked at the plant, gathered in front of the factory, both sad and dejected.

"We lost everything, our education, our youth, our life," says Arun, who joined the factory after discontinuing his degree.

His friend Vinodth says that he joined the plant for its brand value, hoping that it will provide a secure life. "Today we are left with nothing, no education, no job, no income and no respect in the family," he says.

The eligibility criteria for joining the plant was 60% at the Higher Secondary level and a transfer certificate. Hence, many like Arun and Vinodth joined the plant, giving up plans for higher education.

Another worker Prabhu says the government, both at the Centre and the state, failed them. So did the court and Indian-born CEOs of Microsoft and Nokia, Satya Nadella and Rajeev Suri respectively.

"We are the orphans," said these workers on Union Minister for law, telecom and Information Technology Ravi Shankar Prasad's statement that government couldn't save Nokia Chennai from becoming an orphan.

These young men are among the over 30,000 people who were dependant on the factory for their livelihood. The factory employed around 8,000 people directly, over 50% of which were women. The average age of the workers was around 25.
Counting the vendors, who were solely dependant on this facility, and other indirect workers the number of people affected comes to over 30,000.

"If you take away Nokia and the years we spent here, we have nothing as our background. All of us are from a poor background and a majority are from rural areas,” said another employee Saravana Kumar.

Rajan (name changed), aged 27, said, “I fear about how I will take care of the family now."

Many horror and sad stories can be heard in villages in the 100-km radius around the plant. The Sriperumbudur plant was the most productive for Nokia globally, beating even its Chinese plant.

In 2005, the then chief minister J Jayalalithaa proudly announced that her government has convinced Nokia to set up a facility in the state. But the state government did not come to the rescue of the factory, blaming the Centre for its closure. Nor did the Central government despite several petitions from the workers.

Established in 2006 over a 200-acre site, Nokia wheeled out the 'Made for India' 1100 model and then slowly ramped up production to make Chennai its single largest unit for handsets globally. Nokia and its suppliers had invested over Rs 1,800 crore in their facilities.

The plant's cumulative production was 800 million handsets. Nokia would export phones worth more than $2 billion a year. Nokia India's overall turnover totalled Rs 151,000 crore between 2005/06 and 2011/12.



....is it just like sinkieland whereby there are tax free for a certain yrs..after which operating will be much more costlier...so Nokia pack up n go...anyone??
 

gongkia

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yaosiu kia,
The ang mohs are celebrating it in the country you are staying. Why you didn't protest there?
 
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