141 employees of cigarette firm to be sacked in Swabi, Charsadda
PESHAWAR: Citing illicit cigarette trade in the country, the Philip Morris (Pakistan) Limited on Sunday announced that 141 of its employees were being laid off from its leaf purchasing and processing operations.The employees facing the axe are employed in the company’s operations in Swabi and Charsadda, two major tobacco growing
By our correspondents
November 23, 2015
PESHAWAR: Citing illicit cigarette trade in the country, the Philip Morris (Pakistan) Limited on Sunday announced that 141 of its employees were being laid off from its leaf purchasing and processing operations.
The employees facing the axe are employed in the company’s operations in Swabi and Charsadda, two major tobacco growing districts in the country.A press release issued by the company said the decision was taken as a result of the unprecedented rise in Pakistan’s illicit cigarette trade which has seriously impacted legal tobacco sales. “This reduction in legitimate sales has led to a decline in the company’s leaf purchasing and processing operations which has necessitated the reorganization,” it added.
The press release noted that the decision to reorganize the company’s its leaf buying and leaf processing establishments was made as part of a strategic review to optimize process efficiencies and operational effectiveness, and to best position the company for strong and viable future growth.It said this exercise will affect 141 employees, all of whom will be offered generous packages that will exceed what is required by law.
The employees facing the axe are employed in the company’s operations in Swabi and Charsadda, two major tobacco growing districts in the country.A press release issued by the company said the decision was taken as a result of the unprecedented rise in Pakistan’s illicit cigarette trade which has seriously impacted legal tobacco sales. “This reduction in legitimate sales has led to a decline in the company’s leaf purchasing and processing operations which has necessitated the reorganization,” it added.
The press release noted that the decision to reorganize the company’s its leaf buying and leaf processing establishments was made as part of a strategic review to optimize process efficiencies and operational effectiveness, and to best position the company for strong and viable future growth.It said this exercise will affect 141 employees, all of whom will be offered generous packages that will exceed what is required by law.
-
Kate Hudson's Ex Weighs In On Son Ryder's Acting Dreams -
Meghan Markle, Prince Harry's Major Critic Reacts As Duke Wants To Reconcile With William -
WhatsApp Tests ‘Guest Mode’ In Limited Beta For Users Without Accounts To Use App -
Piers Morgan Recalls Meeting With Michael B. Jordan After Oscar Win -
Lewis Hamilton Finally Sends Heartfelt Message To Kim Kardashian After Warnings From His Former Girlfriends -
Trump Reveals Republican Lawmaker Neal Dunn’s ‘terminal’ Heart Condition: ‘Dead By June’ -
Andrew Receives New Orders From Palace After Prince William's Humiliating Decision -
From Sci-fi To Sea: US Pacific Fleet Set To Deploy Flying, Wall-climbing Robots On Ships -
'Saturday Night Live' Maker Wants To Make A 'funny' UK Version Amid World Chaos -
Deadly & Less-targeted Meningitis B Confirmed As Strain Behind Kent Outbreak -
More Pleas Hit King Charles’ Office Over Donald Trump State Visit: ‘You’ll Be Embarrassed’ -
'Sinners' Star Michael B. Jordan Drops His Clever Hack To Winning Oscar -
Prince Harry’s Turns To Archie, Lili Over King Charles’ Cancer Battle: ‘It Kills Him’ -
Are Humans Living In Simulation? Scientist Reveals Shocking Evidence -
King Charles Spends Shocking Sum On House With Bizarre Connection To Queen Camilla Vacation Home -
Anthropic Bolsters ‘responsible AI’ Guardrails Against Chemical And Explosive Threat Risks: Here’s Why