Nadella is planning to be in India between Feb. 24 and Feb.26 and will likely visit New Delhi, tech hub Bengaluru and the financial capital of Mumbai.
Microsoft
Corp Chief Executive Officer Satya
Nadella is planning to visit India later this month, multiple
sources familiar with the plans told Reuters, a test for the
Indian-born head who recently criticized Indian immigration policy.
India
is a major market for Microsoft and other technology companies.
India's southern city of Hyderabad, where Nadella grew up, is home to
Microsoft's biggest research and development center outside of the
United States.
Nadella
is planning to be in India between Feb. 24 and Feb.26 and will likely
visit New Delhi, tech hub Bengaluru and the financial capital of
Mumbai, two people familiar with the plans said. He is also likely to
meet senior Indian industry leaders during his visit, the sources
said. The sources did not want to be identified because the company
has yet to make a public announcement.
Microsoft
declined to comment when asked about a visit. "We don't have
anything to share at the moment," a company spokeswoman said.
Microsoft
also is trying arrange for Nadella to meet Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, one of the sources added, although the meeting has yet
to be confirmed. The Prime Minister's office did not respond to
requests for comment.
Nadella
last month stoked controversy in India when he was quoted by Buzzfeed
as saying a new law implemented by Modi's government that eases the
path to citizenship for non-Muslims in nearby nations was "just
bad".
His
comments drew sharp criticism from Modi's ruling party.
Microsoft
issued a statement later quoting Nadella as saying that every country
has the right to protect and define its borders.
A
visit by Nadella would be in the midst of the government taking a
tougher stance against foreign technology companies competing in the
domestic market by drafting laws aimed at more tightly-controlled
cross-border data flows.
The
visit would also be a month after Amazon.com Inc CEO Jeff Bezos made
a trip to the country and was snubbed by senior members of the
government.
India
has taken a hard stance against the U.S. e-commerce sector, with
Amazon and Walmart's Flipkart facing an antitrust probe and criticism
from brick-and-mortar traders against their business practices.
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