Siemens AG said yesterday it will reorganize its corporate telecom unit, a move that will cut 3,800 jobs and transfer another 3,000 jobs to partners or other units.
The company said in a statement that the decision is part of the conglomerate's plan to reorient and restructure its Siemens Enterprise Networks unit, or SEN, and is "intended to accelerate the company's transformation from a hardware supplier to a software and solutions provider to fit changed market conditions."
The cuts will be global and affect nearly 40 percent of the unit's 17,500 workers.
PHOTO: AFP
Shares of Siemens, whose diverse products include trams, turbines and telecommunications equipment, rose 1.5 percent to 90.08 euros (US$133.47) in Frankfurt.
"We will begin accelerating the reorientation of SEN and related restructuring activities under the control of Siemens to ensure that personnel measures associated with these changes will be as socially compatible as possible," Siemens chief financial officer Joe Kaeser said.
According to the company's plans, 2,000 of the 3,800 jobs cut will be in Germany; and of the 3,000 jobs that are expected to transferred elsewhere, 1,200 are in Germany.
Before the move can take place, though, Siemens must hold talks with its unions, a process that Siegfried Russwurm, head of the Munich-based company's human resources, hoped would start soon.
"We want to immediately begin negotiations with the employee side in Germany about settling interests, and hope to conclude these talks as quickly as possible to give employees the greatest possible certainty about what awaits them in the future," he said.
As part of SEN's shift from hardware to software, the unit will expand its operations in Russia and China -- both key markets -- and shed its manufacturing operations.
"We're reaping the first success-es of our reorientation as a software provider and the measures initiated in the past -- but the restructuring must be rigorously pursued," said Thomas Zimmerman, SEN's chief operating officer.
He said SEN will sell its Leipzig plant, which employs 530 workers, and its telecommunications cable business ,which employs 60 workers, or funnel it to a third-party partner.
SEN is also seeking a partnership with another IT provider so that its 570 direct sales workers can be shifted to it.
For its international operations, SEN said it plans to sell or find partners for its facilities in Greece and Brazil, which employ 270 and 470 workers, respectively. But Siemens warned that the "possibility of a facility being closed down cannot be ruled out."
Additionally, call centers in Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, which employ some 1,100 workers, will be sold off.
The move is part of chief executive Peter Loescher's efforts to reorganize and streamline the conglomerate, which has been wracked by allegations of bribery and fraud.
One of Loescher's goals saw him reorganize Siemens' corporate structure into three units -- healthcare, automation and infrastructure, and energy.
PLA MANEUVERS: Although Beijing has yet to formally announce military drills, its coast guard vessels have been spotted near and around Taiwan since Friday The Taiwanese military is on high alert and is closely monitoring the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) air and naval deployments after Beijing yesterday reserved seven airspace areas east of its Zhejiang and Fujian provinces through Wednesday. Beijing’s action was perceived as a precursor to a potential third “Joint Sword” military exercise, which national security experts said the PLA could launch following President William Lai’s (賴清德) state visits to the nation’s three Pacific allies and stopovers in Hawaii and Guam last week. Unlike the Joint Sword military exercises in May and October, when Beijing provided detailed information about the affected areas, it
Five flights have been arranged to help nearly 2,000 Taiwanese tourists return home from Okinawa after being stranded due to cruise ship maintenance issues, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications announced yesterday. China Airlines Ltd (中華航空), and EVA Airways Corp (長榮航空) have arranged five flights with a total of 748 additional seats to transport 1,857 passengers from the MSC Bellissima back to Taiwan, the ministry said. The flights have been scheduled for yesterday and today by the Civil Aviation Administration, with the cruise operator covering all associated costs. The MSC Bellissima, carrying 4,341 passengers, departed from Keelung on Wednesday last week for Okinawa,
US president-elect Donald Trump said he would “never say” if Washington is committed to defending Taiwan from China, but “I would prefer that they do not do it [ an attack],” adding that he has a “good relationship” with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平). “I never say because I have to negotiate things, right?” Trump said in an interview with NBC’s Meet the Press host Kristen Welker after saying he would not reveal his incoming administration’s stance on Taiwan’s defense in the event of an attack. Asked the question again, Trump, in a reference to China, said: “I would prefer that they
CROSS-STRAIT TENSIONS: MOFA demanded Beijing stop its military intimidation and ‘irrational behavior’ that endanger peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region The Presidential Office yesterday called on China to stop all “provocative acts,” saying ongoing Chinese military activity in the nearby waters of Taiwan was a “blatant disruption” of the “status quo” of security and stability in the Indo-Pacific region. Defense officials said they have detected Chinese ships since Monday, both off Taiwan and farther out along the first island chain. They described the formations as two walls designed to demonstrate that the waters belong to China. The Ministry of National Defense yesterday said it had detected 53 military aircraft operating around the nation over the past 24 hours, as well