JLR hack could see thousands laid off - MP

Liam Byrne MP is concerned hundreds of workers could lose their livelihoods following the JLR hack
- Published
The cyber attack on Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) is a "digital siege" that is seeing supply chain workers "laid off in their hundreds", an MP has said.
Liam Byrne, chair of the Commons business and trade committee and Labour MP for Birmingham Hodge Hill & North Solihull, said: "We fear if the government doesn't step up soon, people will be laid off in their thousands."
The firm said on Tuesday factory production would not resume until 24 September at the earliest and apologised for the ongoing disruption.
The hack happened more than two weeks ago and has forced the company to shut down computer systems and halt production.
Though some have warned disruption could last until November, JLR described this as "speculation".
Production lines were paused on 1 September, when the hack came to light.
The shutdown is believed to be costing the firm, which has factories in Solihull, Castle Bromwich and Halewood, an engine facility in Wolverhampton, and plants overseas, at least £50m a week.
The company has not revealed how much damage was caused, but a criminal investigation has begun.
JLR said it had delayed restarting production as "forensic investigation" of the cyber incident continued and it considered a "controlled restart" of global operations.

Jaguar Land Rover's design and engineering centre is in Gaydon, Warwickshire
Byrne said he had written to the chancellor to request Covid-style emergency help for suppliers.
"This is not a mere flicker on the screen at Jaguar Land Rover, this is a digital siege and it's sent a cyber shockwave through their supply chain," he said.
"We think this is an attack which is much, much worse than the attack that took down Marks and Spencer."
He said, with more of these types of attacks happening, the government needed to act as a backstop to a "different insurance system" to help firms which was not currently in place.
Meanwhile, West Midlands mayor Richard Parker said the attack was having a massive impact on JLR and the supply chain.
He said he wanted to reassure people he was talking to the business secretary, the chancellor, JLR, and unions "and we have good understanding of the issues which need to be resolved".
He added the firm was working with the government, "collating and collecting" the impact of the shut down on businesses across the supply chain, and to develop "best approaches about intervening to help them over the next few weeks and months".
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