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BT Group to cut 4,000 jobs worldwide

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LONDON: Troubled British telecoms giant BT said on Thursday it will axe 4,000 jobs worldwide in a new cost-cutting drive, after posting sliding profits in a “challengin­g” year.

The positions will be cut across three divisions, which comprise global services, group functions, and technology, services and operations, BT said in its annual results statement.

The group, which currently employs 102,500 staff and operates in 180 countries, will take a oneoff restructur­ing charge of £300 million ($388 million).

Meanwhile, pre-tax profit dived by a fifth to £2.35 billion in the financial year to the end of March, hit by an Italian accounting scandal, troubles at its Openreach broadband unit, and challengin­g trade both at home and abroad.

“Technology trends mean that we are now less dependent on owning physical local network assets around the world, creating the opportunit­y to reposition Global Services as a more focused digital business,” said Chief Executive Gavin Patterson.

The group was therefore restructur­ing its Global Services division, and speeding up and expanding its cost transforma­tion programmes, he said. “This will help offset mar- ket and regulatory pressures and create the capacity for future investment,” Patterson said.

BT added on Thursday that its remunerati­on committee has stripped Patterson of his 2016/2017 bonus, totaling £338,398, as a result of a string of problems.

In January, BT revealed news of an accounting scandal at its Italian division which cost the group £530 million.

And in March, regulator Ofcom hit BT with a bill of around £350 million in fines and compensati­on following delays to highspeed cable installati­ons by its Openreach broadband unit.

“The past year has been challengin­g,” noted Tony Ball, remunerati­on committee chairman, in a separate statement.

“Unfortunat­ely our performanc­e has been significan­tly affected by the accounting irregulari­ties in our Italian business, the issues that arose in Openreach ... and the significan­t challenges we faced in the UK public sector and internatio­nal corporate markets.”

The committee had made “a number of difficult decisions this year in light of these circumstan­ces and exercised its discretion accordingl­y,” Ball said.

 ??  ?? British telecoms giant BT currently employs 102,500 workers and operates in 180 countries. (AFP)
British telecoms giant BT currently employs 102,500 workers and operates in 180 countries. (AFP)

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