Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Fire disrupts production at Tata’s iPhone plant India

There were no reports of casualties

Fire disrupts production at Tata’s iPhone plant India
Tata Electronics plant in Hosur

FIREFIGHTERS battled on Saturday (28) to douse a fire that halted production at a major Tata Electronics plant in southern India which makes components for Apple's iPhone, three people with knowledge of the situation said.

There were no reports of casualties, but it was not immediately clear how extensively the fire, near a building set to soon turn out complete smartphones, would disrupt operations of the plant in the city of Hosur in Tamil Nadu state.


Tata Electronics is one of the major contract makers of iPhones in India, along with Foxconn. The company said it was investigating the cause of the fire and would take necessary steps to safeguard employees and other stakeholders.

"There has been an unfortunate incident of fire," a Tata Electronics spokesperson said in a statement. "Our emergency protocols at the plant ensured that all employees are safe."

The fire caused the collapse of a building at the plant but no casualties were reported, a fire services official said.

"We can't go inside now as the pathway is destroyed," said J. Saravanan, a senior district official charged with handling industrial safety, adding, "It will take one day for it to cool down."

Authorities were investigating the cause, he said.

Production was halted and employees sent home for the day because of the fire, a person with direct knowledge of the incident said earlier, describing the blaze as chemical-related.

A second industry source aware of the plant's operations said certain iPhone components were made at the affected building.

However, the source added, it was not yet clear if a neighbouring building, where smartphone manufacturing was due to start by year-end, had also been affected.

With the facility inaccessible at the moment, the source said, an assessment of damage from the fire will have to be done later.

Apple made no immediate comment on the incident.

Firefighters will need time to extinguish the fire, which began in an area used to store chemicals, the fire official said on condition of anonymity, as he was not authorised to speak to the media.

More than 10 fire and rescue vehicles were fighting the flames, the Hindu newspaper said.

(Reuters)

More For You

Instagram removes DM encryption from today: What users should do to stay safe

Meta can’t read WhatsApp messages, but it can see who you talk to, when, and how often and use that data for ads and recommendations

iStock

Instagram removes DM encryption from today: What users should do to stay safe

Highlights

  • Instagram switches off end-to-end encryption just before federal deepfake law enforcement begins.
  • Meta can now read private messages it previously could not access.
  • Privacy experts warn against storing downloaded chats in Google Drive or iCloud.
Instagram is removing a privacy feature from May 8 that previously stopped the company from accessing the content of users’ direct messages.
The change comes just days before a new US federal law requires platforms to scan and remove harmful content.
The change affects users who turned on Instagram's end-to-end encryption option for direct messages.
Most Instagram users never switched on this feature, according to digital privacy expert Harry Maugans. For the small number who did, the protection ends on May 8.

End-to-end encryption works like a sealed envelope. The platform can see who sent a message and who received it, but cannot open it to read what is inside.

When Instagram removes this feature, it effectively removes the privacy layer that kept messages hidden. As a result, Meta would be able to access the content of those messages.

Keep ReadingShow less