Telangana Joint Commissioner (Labour) R Chandra Sekharam told PTI that he has received a petition from these workers "seeking justice".
"We received a petition from the employees. They say the company announced layoffs. I am yet to hear the company's version. We will shortly call them for a hearing," the official told PTI.
When contacted, the company said, "Percentage of slow down (in terms of production) is 50 per cent...That's why Hyderabad is waiting next shipment of parts, while Amritsar continues to produce". The tablet maker has two assembly units -Amritsar and Hyderabad.
The company also alleged that the some of the workers "vandalised" the facility located at Hyderabad International Airport.
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"We advised the employees that we are planning to open a new facility in Secunderabad and will need to move since GMR (promoters of the airport) wants this space as they want to expand the airport. But most of these people are from around Shamshabad and they got panicked," Datawind said.
The exact number of people, who lost their jobs is not immediately known.
The company said the Hyderabad facility had 500 people at one time, but now there are only a dozen in the GMR facility, while about 150 are working in a call centre in Begumpet area in the city.
Chandra Sekharam said he could not recall as to how many workers signed the petition, but added that it might be more than 200.
"Currently, we are waiting for updates from the Telangana government on their industrial policy after the implementation of GST, since sales tax waiver was a key incentive offered by the government," the company said in an e-mail reply.
Datawind made the world's cheapest tablet Aakash for the Indian government after winning the contract to supply one lakh units priced at USD 49.98 apiece (Rs 2,276 at that time) in 2011. The project was then handled by IIT Jodhpur, which provided the specifications for the product.
Datawind, in a regulatory filing recently, said demonetisation has placed a significant stress on the company's working capital cycle.
"As a result, we saw a significant decrease in sales in the last two quarters of the fiscal year (2017), as Indian people spent what little physical cash they have on necessities," Suneet Singh Tuli, president and CEO of DataWind had said in the filing.
The Hyderabad facility witnessed a phased investment of Rs 100 crore and the facility will manufacture two million units (tablets and smart phones) in the first year, whereas at full capacity it can reach up to five million units, Datawind had said in November 2016.