Jobs at risk as Microsoft plans shutting down Lagos centre

Microsoft, United States-based multinational technology giant, has considered closing one of the operations in Nigeria, known as African Development Centre located in Lagos.

Microsoft’s ADC is located in Ikoyi, highbrow area of Lagos, the commercial headquarters of Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy.

Without giving any reason, Microsoft, it was learnt, revealed to its members of staff on Monday about shutting down operations in its African Development Centre in Lagos.

It was learnt that the affected employees would receive salary payments till June and continue to be covered by health insurance.

While the exact reasons behind the decision remain ambiguous, sources suggest Nigeria’s worsening economic conditions may have adversely impacted a role in arriving at the decision.

According to the report, the closure appears to affect only the ADC’s West Africa operations in Nigeria, but not its East Africa facility in Nairobi, Kenya. 

Microsoft launched its $100 million African Development Centers initiative in 2019, establishing facilities in both Lagos and Nairobi.

Nigeria’s Microsoft ADC hired more than 120 engineers when it was unveiled in 2022, growing to more than 200 staff members in total.

The company in 2019 aimed to recruit 100 full-time engineers by the end of the year, and 500 engineers by the end of 2023. Microsoft is betting on African innovation in fields like fintech, agritech and off-grid energy and hopes to tap into them.

“The ADC will be unlike any other existing investment on the continent. It will help us better listen to our customers, develop locally and scale for global impact,” Microsoft executive vice president Phil Spencer said in Nairobi. 

“Beyond that, it’s an opportunity to engage further with African partners, academia, governments and developers – driving impact and innovation in sectors important to Africa.”

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