Software giant Microsoft plans to close its plant in Salo in Finland, as per media reports.
The plant was taken over from Nokia as part of Microsoft's acquisition of the Finland-based phone maker's handset business, reported Xinhua news agency.
Microsoft confirmed that as a result of the retrenchment negotiations completed in Finland on Friday, about 2,300 of 3,200 jobs will be slashed and the operation of the Salo plant will be transferred to other Finnish cities.
The company said it will concentrate on its phone business in Espoo and Tampere after the closure of the Salo plant.
Microsoft announced in July that it was about to cut a total of 7,800 jobs around the world, most of which were from the phone business bought from Nokia more than one year ago.
Microsoft launched its largest-ever layoffs of 18,000 employees in July 2014. The company has nearly 118,600 workers worldwide as of March 2015.