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Chinese anti-trust regulator conducted new raids on Microsoft Corp and partner
in China Accenture PLC, the agency said on its website, after saying last week
Microsoft is under investigation for anti-trust violations.
The
State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) raided offices in
Beijing, Liaoning, Fujian and Hubei, it said. The SAIC also raided the Dalian
offices of IT consultancy Accenture, to whom Microsoft outsources financial
work, according to the regulator.
Microsoft
and Accenture declined to provide immediate comment.
Last
week, the SAIC said it was formally investigating Microsoft for breach of
anti-trust rules and had raided four of the software firm's offices in China.
Microsoft
has been suspected of violating China's anti-monopoly law since June last year
in relation to problems with compatibility, bundling and document
authentication for its Windows operating system and Microsoft Office software,
the SAIC said last week.
Microsoft
deputy general counsel Mary Snapp was in Beijing to meet with the SAIC, where
the regulator warned Microsoft to not obstruct the probe.
But
industry experts have questioned how exactly Microsoft is violating anti-trust
regulations in China, where the size of its business is negligible.
The
US company has taken a public beating in China in recent months. It has been
subject to wider scrutiny against US technology firms in China in the wake of
former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden's cyberespionage
revelations.
It
has also seen service for its OneDrive cloud storage service disrupted in
China, and had its latest Windows 8 operating system banned from being
installed on the central government's new computers.
The
Microsoft investigation comes amidst a spate of anti-trust probes against
foreign firms in China, including mobile chipset maker Qualcomm Inc and German
car maker Daimler AG's luxury auto unit Mercedes-Benz.
China
is intensifying efforts to bring companies into compliance with an
anti-monopoly law enacted in 2008, having in recent years taken aim at
industries as varied as milk powder and jewellery.
In
recent months, regulators have ramped up probes in industries ranging from
pharmaceuticals to electronics. A number of multinational companies including
Mead Johnson Nutrition Co and Danone SA have been slapped with substantial
fines following similar investigations in the past.
China
on Wednesday said it will punish foreign car makers Audi, owned by Volkswagen,
and Fiat SpA's Chrysler as well as some 10 Japanese spare-part makers for
anti-trust violations.
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