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Maruti faces costly shutdown after deadly factory riot

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Maruti faces costly shutdown after deadly factory riot

Fri Jul 20, 2012 4:14am EDT

* Maruti stands to lose $15 million a day during shutdown

* Violent clashes damaged assembly line -source

* One dead, scores injured, 90 in jail after riot

* Market value chopped by $570 mln on Thursday

By Henry Foy

MUMBAI, July 20 (Reuters) - Indian carmaker Maruti Suzuki , a manager killed and 90 employees in jail after workers rioted at its second-largest factory, faces a lengthy shutdown that could cost it $15 million a day and disrupt supplies of its most popular hatchback.

Police said they want to detain the entire workforce of 3,000 at the Manesar factory in northern India, where workers rampaged on Wednesday after a disciplinary incident with a single employee. Scores were injured and a portion of the factory's vehicle assembly line was burned out.

The violence, just nine months after the end of strikes at the facility that cost more than $500 million in lost production, spooked investors worried that Maruti has failed to resolve labour tensions at the 550,000 vehicle per year plant.

"This definitely mars the overall investment sentiment for the stock," said Navin Matta, auto analyst at Daiwa Capital Markets in Mumbai, adding that the lack of clarity on the length of the slowdown was a cause for concern.

More than $570 million was wiped off the company's market value on Thursday, while shares of its Japanese parent Suzuki Motor Corp fell 5.7 percent over the past two sessions to their lowest in three and a half years.

"After being terrorised, abused and attacked in this manner by the mob, recovery for the injured will not be easy," Maruti said in a statement late on Thursday.

A spokesman for the carmaker declined to comment on the possible length of the factory closure, although an official told Reuters the factory would not reopen on Monday.

"Part of the manufacturing area is burned, the whole building is burned, and the people who are running the factory are injured and admitted in the hospital, so it will take a little time," said the official, who was not permitted to speak to the media and declined to be identified.


PROLONGED SHUTDOWN

The state government of Haryana, where the plant is located, is considering a prolonged shutdown of the factory, the Economic Times newspaper reported on Friday, citing unnamed government officials.

The office of the chief secretary and labour minister declined to comment on the report when contacted by Reuters.

Police said on Thursday that they are seeking to detain all of the plant's 3,000 workers for investigation, creating a logistical nightmare for Maruti's managers -- many of whom were injured in the riot -- to get the factory working again.

"Nobody knows when the plant might restart," said Ashish Nigam, auto analyst at Antique Stockbroking in Mumbai.

"The only concern (Maruti) have is the people who are in the hospital ... the business has taken a back seat for the time being," Nigam said.

Maruti lost around $15 million per day in missed production during the strikes last year, and analysts polled by Reuters said the company stands to lose $12-$16 million per day during the current shutdown.

Maruti manufactures its best-selling Swift hatchback -- the leader in its segment -- at the Manesar plant. A spokesman for the company confirmed that it would not build any more Swifts while the factory was closed but declined to give details on inventories or back orders for the vehicle.

Workers armed with iron rods and wooden sticks rioted through the plant in Manesar, around 40 km (25 miles) south of New Delhi, attacking managers, smashing equipment and setting fire to parts of the factory, the company said.

"Most executives sit at the mezzanine floor. They attacked that floor and targeted the most senior officers. They came armed with lathis and iron rods, and also picked up other sharp tools in the factory," said a Maruti official, who had a broken hand and head injuries and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Labour unrest is not uncommon in India, which has a strong tradition of street protests and sit-in demonstrations by workers' unions, political parties and campaign groups, although the level of violence seen at the Maruti plant sparked a chorus of condemnation from politicians, the media and industry groups. (Additional reporting by Anurag Kotoky in New Delhi; Editing by Edmund Klamann)

Maruti faces costly shutdown after deadly factory riot | Reuters
 
They will learn a lesson when they will be starving to death. This is how they repay when pvt sector helps them where even the govt can't. Give em a finger and they will take the whole hand. Bunch of thankless thugs
 
Maruti is most certainly heading to Gujarat.

Thats the right thing to do, the state Govt is helpless to control things in the face of a group that has the ability to give them even 100 votes.

The sooner it does the faster it will be able to come back on stream.
 
Are these workers allowed to do trade union?

What is price impact on Maruti cars?
 
Are these workers allowed to do trade union?

What is price impact on Maruti cars?

No price impact...at the max a bit delay on delivery of bookings and that too in case they are moving to Gujarat. They might make some negotiations at Manesar plants itself, you never know
 
These bas.tard workers should starve to death
They and their familes should remain jobless for rest of their lives

Instead of facing a shut down after every few months , it is better for Maruti to relocate production at Gujrat Coz Cost of relocation is not going to be any more than the 3 Month long shut down that we are likely to see
 
The article is missing the most important piece of information...like why they riot in the first place? Manager killed, police threatening to arrest the entire 3,000 workforce, oh and market value of the company dropping over half a billion dollars overnight--this is pretty severe.

The Riot Destruction
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Slain manager carried off in a body bag
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India special police brigade arrives ready for battle
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The carmaker, owned by Japan's Suzuki Motor, said the plant's offices were "burnt beyond repair" while nearly 100 of its managers had to be hospitalised, some with serious injuries.

The workers, wielding iron rods, fanned out in groups, beating managers "on their head, legs and back, rendering many of their victims bleeding and unconscious", the company said.

A number suffered broken bones, head wounds and other injuries, a Maruti executive said, while two Japanese executives, including the Manesar plant manager, were also in hospital with undisclosed injuries.

"This is the most serious labour unrest I have seen in the last few years," Deepesh Rathore, managing director of IHS Automotive India, a consultancy, said.

"The situation is so ugly that senior managers may not want to work with Maruti at the plant in future, fearing for their safety."

The violence suggests "there was always a very strong undercurrent of discontent" even after work resumed at the plant last year, he added.

"All senior employees had to run to escape the angry mob - some jumped over factory walls," Virendra Prasad, a supervisor who suffered head injuries, told reporters.

Maruti said the dispute erupted Wednesday morning when a shop-floor employee beat up a supervisor.

Maruti Suzuki manager burned to death by workers | Herald Sun

Indian workers practicing their indian democracy.
 
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