General

Telenor takes up six-month paid maternity leave policy

Author : NewsGram Desk

By NewsGram staff writer

New Delhi: Telenor India adopted a six-month maternity leave policy aiming to create an equitable work-life balance for employees. This will be in effect from January 1, 2016, a company statement said on Tuesday.

The Norwegian telecom service provider adopted this maternity leave policy as a minimum standard globally across its 13 markets. Approximately 36 percent of Telenor's global workforce consists of women, the statement said.

In India, Women and Child Development Minister Maneka Gandhi also wants the companies to extend the maternity leave policy to eight months from the existing three months.

"With the goal of ensuring that our organisation better reflects the world we live in, and in order to attract, retain, and develop female leadership talent, we are instituting a minimum six-month paid maternity leave as standard for our employees everywhere we operate," Sigve Brekke, the president and chief executive officer (CEO), Telenor Group, said.

"It is our goal to attract and retain the best of Indian talent, male or female. We are confident the revised maternity leave policy will make Telenor not only a very attractive place to work for men and women, but also a place in which women can build careers and continue to fill the ranks of our leadership," Vivek Sood, CEO of Telenor India said.

(With inputs from IANS)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp

Download our app on Play Store

AI-Generated Documents, Luxury Cars and  Pakistan Links: 5 People Who Were Arrested for Posing as Fake IAS and IPS Officers

Ram Mandir Donation Row LIVE Updates: Head of Ram Niwas Temple Alleges Champat Rai and 'his gang' Illegally Took Trust's Control

DELUSIONAL TAKE: “Siya’s extreme behaviour is being justified by some as being the last resort of a trapped girl who wanted out but was denied choice,” Writes Columnist Shobhaa De

How Google and AI Nearly Made a Seasoned Reporter Spiral

How Lohagad Fort Became 'Siya Point': What Is Dark Tourism, the $32.8 Billion Industry Drawing Millions to Tragedy Sites?