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Indian alcohol firm Som's shares plunge in the middle of kid labour concerns

Shares of Indian alcohol firm Som Distilleries and Breweries fell as much as 9%. on Thursday after authorities stated they would seize among the. group's distilleries, where authorities stated 59 children had been. working illegally.

Police released an investigation into Som after the National. Commission for Defense of Child Rights (NCPCR) last week. found 39 kids and 20 women operating at a distillery in Madhya. Pradesh state. The firm also launched photos of children's. hands with chemical burns.

Som shares fell almost 9% on Thursday, taking weekly losses. to 15%, before recovering. The company is valued at $271. million, according to LSEG data.

Som said in an exchange filing today the problem was. related to a plant run by its associate personal limited. business, which used labour supplied by specialists, who may not. have actually carried out proper age checks.

Some of the children discovered operating at the distillery were. taken to the factory in school buses, NCPCR has stated.

On the basis of the interaction with the kids, there is. an apprehension that the minors discovered operating in the stated. distilleries might have been given the properties in the guise. of taking kids to school or to play, NCPCR stated in a June. 19 letter to state officials, seen .

The state government has momentarily suspended the plant's. manufacturing licences.

The company in its 2022 annual report mentioned its policy and. practices relating to security of human rights, including not. using kid labour, uses to the business and its systems, as. well regarding the contractors engaged by the company.

In its newest 2023 yearly report, Som likewise flagged absolutely no. cases of child labour complaints filed by staff members and employees.

Som offers beer and whisky in India's successful alcohol. market, where both foreign and domestic players operate. Its. website explains it as an worldwide well-known brand. offered in over 20 markets consisting of the United States, New. Zealand and the UK.

(source: Reuters)