Strike Shuts Down Outsourcing In India - Industries News by InformationWeek








RSS FEEDS



SUBSCRIBE



EVENTS



HOME



CMP - United Business Media
InformationWeek

Business Innovation Powered By Technology

InformationWeek on the Go

Get News On Your Phone


Part of the TechWeb Business Technology Network


SEARCH









NEWS



WINDOWS



SECURITY



OUTSOURCING



INTERNET



SOFTWARE



HARDWARE



MANAGEMENT



RESEARCH & TOOLS



INDUSTRIES



CAREERS





















»  E-Mail
»  Print
»  Discuss
»  Write To Editor
»  Digg
»  Slashdot

Strike Shuts Down Outsourcing In India



Despite its importance in the U.S. economy, the region's tech industry isn't exempt from civil turmoil and complex socioeconomic issues.






Civil unrest once again has shut down Bangalore's tech industry. IBM, Infosys, Wipro, and hundreds more outsourcing and technology companies didn't open Bangalore facilities Monday due to a labor strike over a court decision on water distribution from a nearby river.

The protest stemmed from a long-running struggle over precious water between the state of Karnataka, of which Bangalore is the capital, and the state of Tamil Nadu.

Businesses and schools were ordered closed and police patrolled the streets, according to reports published from India. Activists were arrested for trying to block trains, and set motorcycles and scooters on fire in the neighboring city of Mysore.

Last month, many Bangalore businesses closed due to riots between Muslims and Hindus. And in October, Tata Consultancy Services, Wipro, and others closed Bangalore offices and sent staff home due to a public sector strike related to a border dispute. Outsourcers shifted time-critical work to backup centers in other cities and planned Saturday shifts to make up for lost time.

Bangalore is often compared with the U.S.'s Silicon Valley. The recent spate of civil unrest and business closures, however, are a reminder that the region's tech industry isn't exempt from the turmoil and complex socioeconomic issues facing the rapidly developing country.

Violence and safety concerns haven't stemmed just from protest. Last year, Indian authorities arrested a suspected member of a Kashmiri separatist group who was plotting attacks on major Bangalore outsourcing companies. The man reportedly carried an assault rifle, 300 rounds of ammunition, and a map marking the location of headquarters for outsourcing company Infosys Technologies, according to newspapers in India.

Because of its prominence as a national source of revenue, India's outsourcing sector is becoming a favorite target of dissident terrorist groups, including those seeking Kashmir's secession from the country.

In 2005, members of the Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist group were found with plans targeting IT companies in Bangalore.

Additional tech and outsourcing companies with facilities in Bangalore include Accenture, Amazon, AMD, Bearing Point, CapGemini, Cognizant, Dell, Google, Intel, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, Sun, and Yahoo.




»  E-Mail
»  Print
»  Discuss
»  Del.icio.us
»  Digg
»  Slashdot
»  Reprint This Article
»  Download Top Reports

Advertisement





CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it?
SEARCH
Function:

Keyword(s):

State:
SPONSOR

RECENT JOB POSTINGS
CAREER NEWS
For some job seekers, a trip to a virtual world may hold the key to an actual job.

This California startup relies on its strong and vibrant user base to pull on expertise and has built its organization as a flat-world environment to foster collaboration and communication.

Related Stories


»
As Hiring Soars In India, Good Managers Are Hard To Find


»
IBM Head Count In India Tops 50,000


»
Accenture HeadCount In India Will Surpass U.S. Levels By August









Advertisement



Current Issue

View all stories from our current issue

This Week's Cover

Photograph by Stan Watts

View stories from past issues
sorted by date.

Subscribe to InformationWeek Magazine


Focus On






Microsite Of The Week

Powerful Information at your fingertips (sponsored links)


»
The Role of an Enterprise Service Bus in an SOA



»
What role does IT play in business innovation?



»
Stephanie Stahl gets the executive scoop at CIOs Uncensored



»
White paper describes how IP-KVM switches reduce server and data center TCO



Subscription Info

Apply for a free 52-week subscription
to InformationWeek (a $199 value)

First Name:
Last Name:
Company Name:
  Title:
Business Address:
  City:
State:
  Zip:
Email Address:
 
NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only












News   »  Windows   »  Security   »  Outsourcing   »  Internet   »  Software   »  Hardware   »  Management   »  Research & Tools   »  Industries   »  Careers


»  About Us   »  Contact Us   »  Site Map   »  Media Kit   »  Editorial Calendar   »  White Papers   »  Briefing Centers
»  Privacy   »  Your California Privacy Rights





Other CMP Sites:   »  Optimize Magazine   »  Informationweek Germany   »  Network Computing   »  Dark Reading
  »  Light Reading   »  InternetWeek   »  TechWeb





Terms of Service Copyright © 2007 CMP Media LLC, All rights reserved.