A number of international companies have suspended operations in Egypt as three days of violent street battles make the streets of Cairo unsafe.
General Motors Co, Electrolux AB, Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Toyota Motor Corp, Suzuki Motor Corp, BASF SE and others shut down facilities and told thousands of workers to stay at home during unrest that has left about 700 people dead since Wednesday.
“This was a precautionary safety measure to ensure employees would not be exposed to risks travelling to and from work,” Daniel Frykholm, a spokesman for Swedish appliance maker Electrolux, said in an e-mail. The company, which has about 6,700 workers in Egypt, asked employees to stay home on Wednesday afternoon and Thursday.
Friday and Saturday are the Egyptian weekend, and the company will decide on Saturday evening if it’s safe enough to resume normal operations, Frykholm said.
Royal Dutch Shell closed its offices on Thursday. They will remain shuttered on Friday and Saturday. The company also restricted employee travel as the violence continued and said it was monitoring the situation. It was unclear whether Shell’s main production facility, a joint venture with Badr El-Din Petroleum Co, had been closed.
General Motors’ Egyptian operations will remain shut indefinitely, including a plant in the Cairo suburb of 6th October City where it makes cars, light trucks and minibuses.
The auto giant has about 1,400 workers in Egypt, where in 1983 it became the first private automaker to establish operations in the country.
In Cairo, German retail giant Metro closed its headquarters, and its only two grocery stores in the capital were shuttered on Friday, a spokesman for the Duesseldorf company confirmed.
The chemical company BASF temporarily closed its manufacturing facilities and offices. BASF has been operating in Egypt for about 60 years and produces chemicals used in construction at a plant in the Cairo suburb of Sadat City.
IHS Automotive analyst Paul Newton in London said that Toyota and Suzuki also halted Egyptian production. Because of the unstable political situation, the forecasting company predicted that light-vehicle production in Egypt would fall almost 8 per cent this year, with sales dropping nearly 4 per cent.
Egypt is one of the largest vehicle manufacturing centres in Africa, Newton said.