January 10, 200620 yr Toyota shuts down car factory in India indefinitely BANGALORE, India -- Japanese automaker Toyota Motor Corp. indefinitely shut down its vehicle factory near the southern Indian city of Bangalore after workers went on strike last week to protest the dismissal of three employees, an executive at the plant said Monday. Workers began the strike Friday, demanding the three dismissed employees of the factory be rehired, said A.R. Shankar, the general manager of Toyota Kirloskar Auto Parts Ltd., the joint venture that directly runs the plant. The factory, which is 89 percent owned by the Toyota, rolls out about 70 cars a day, including Toyota's Innova and Corolla models. India's Kirloskar Group owns the remainder of the plant. "We were forced to declare a lockout because the safety of our officers and machines was threatened by the striking employees," Shankar told The Associated Press. The company and union representing the workers resumed negotiations Monday afternoon with the state's labor commissioner mediating the talks, but the two sides appeared far apart. A few hundred workers demonstrated outside the local government's labor welfare office Monday to protest the lockout. R. Ravi, the general secretary of the factory's union, accused the company of the firing the three workers because they were active in the union. "For quite some time now, the management has been victimizing some employees for organizing the labor and wants to suppress any union activity," he said. "We want the government to intervene and get the three employees reinstated. The lockout should be lifted immediately." But Shankar said the three workers were "dismissed on disciplinary grounds." He did not elaborate, but insisted the workers would not be rehired. "We hope we will be able to lift the lookout in the near future, but we really don't know for sure," Shankar said. "We don't know which direction the events are set to take and it is a tense moment for the company." With Indians buying about 1 million cars each year, the nation has emerged as a fast-growing automobile market. Companies like Ford Motor Co., General Motors Corp. and South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co. are increasing production and launching new models to meet growing demand. Toyota has so far invested $350 million in the Indian subsidiary. --------------------------------- Were this GM or Ford, probably front page news. But since its Toyota, there's barely any mention of it that I'm aware of. Great News, America! This is what you're getting yourself into by buying up Toyotas and shunning your own auto industry
January 10, 200620 yr Toyota Motor Corp. indefinitely shut down its vehicle factory near the southern Indian city of Bangalore after workers went on strike Sounds almost like Walmart
January 10, 200620 yr Author Sounds almost like Walmart Interestingly enough, I refuse to shop there as well Edited January 10, 200620 yr by nyscene911
January 10, 200620 yr For dismissing 3 employees? LOL. The plant puts out only 70 cars a day, too. Toyota would be better off importing the cars.
January 10, 200620 yr I'm curious to here from the other side of the pond so to speak ... for example, I want to know exactly why those 3 workers were fired. If there are legitimate reasons for them being fired, then I don't see what the strike is about. Otherwise it's really strange why Toyota would do that.
January 11, 200620 yr Toyota probably already had an eye to remove the factory... 70 cars per day is rather dismal...
January 11, 200620 yr For dismissing 3 employees? LOL. The plant puts out only 70 cars a day, too. Toyota would be better off importing the cars. They olnly have that plant there to hold the illusion that they build cars domestically in India. They pretty much do the same thing here in the US, but just to a greater extent because of logistics.
January 11, 200620 yr The plant is back open, by the way. Naturally, labor is cheap in India and there are plenty of people that can be hired as replacement.
January 12, 200620 yr Naturally, labor is cheap in India and there are plenty of people that can be hired as replacement. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/artic...448/1148/AUTO01 "All our employees, even those in management and clerical positions, are trained in production and we are going to use their skills now," Shankar said." God forbid GM ever does that. Even though the strike continues, Toyota will open the plant using every available worker not part of the strike.
January 13, 200620 yr Sounds to me like Toyota simply did what GM refuses to do..... ....play HARDBALL with the union....
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