fbpx

Type to search

Samsung Claims Indian Officials Acted Unlawfully in Probe

Samsung is caught in a competition probe that found it and other firms broke anti-trust laws by colluding with Amazon and Flipkart to exclusively launch products online


News that Samsung may drop Google and switch the default search engine on its devices to Bing, which has integrated artificial intelligence features, could cost the US tech giant billions.
Samsung signage is seen in a store in Manhattan, New York City. Photo: Reuters

 

Samsung has accused India’s competition watchdog of unlawfully detaining its employees and seizing data.

The South Korean tech giant alleges that these actions occurred in a raid carried out in connection with an anti-monopoly probe into Amazon and Walmart’s Flipkart, a legal filing shows.

Samsung is embroiled in the Competition Commission of India‘s (CCI) investigation that in August concluded that the South Korean giant and other smartphone companies broke anti-trust laws by colluding with Amazon and Flipkart to exclusively launch products online.

 

ALSO SEE: India Competition Body Seeks Ruling on Amazon, Flipkart Cases

 

Samsung’s October 11 filing in the High Court in northern city of Chandigarh seeks to quash the investigation findings related to conduct of the company, arguing the CCI had illegally seized material from its employees during a 2022 raid at one of Amazon’s vendors, Reuters said.

Three Samsung employees were present in the vicinity of the search when the watchdog’s officials detained them, seized their phones and copied all the confidential and privileged data, the company said in its 32-page filing, which hasn’t been made public.

“The entire search exercise undertaken … is patently illegal and any material collected thereunder should not be relied upon and should be promptly returned,” the Indian unit of South Korea’s Samsung Electronics wrote.

The CCI “should be prohibited from using or relying upon the data and information unlawfully collected,” it added.

Samsung and the CCI did not respond to Reuters’ queries.

 

Court injunction to stop CCI action

Samsung has obtained an injunction from the High Court that has put on hold the CCI proceedings, but the court has not yet ruled on its requests to return the data seized and to not allow the commission to rely on it.

The CCI has challenged Samsung and 22 other parties that have won similar injunctions from high courts across India, and last week asked the Supreme Court to hear all challenges together, saying the companies were trying to scuttle the investigation.

The CCI investigation had found that Amazon and Flipkart both breached competition laws by favouring select sellers on their platforms.

Amazon and Flipkart have repeatedly denied wrongdoing, even as brick-and-mortar retailers continue to complain about their deep discounting and other practices.

In its court filing Samsung also asserted that it was wrongly found to have breached competition laws in collusion with Amazon and Flipkart, even though it had been cooperating with the watchdog and providing information only as a third-party in the case.

The inclusion of smartphone makers in the Amazon and Flipkart investigation could increase legal and compliance headaches for the likes of Samsung.

In the August investigation reports, the CCI noted that Samsung was involved in the practice of exclusive phone launches on Amazon and Flipkart, saying “exclusivity in business is anathema” and against free and fair competition.

According to Counterpoint Research Samsung is one of India’s biggest smartphone player with a 14% market share. Datum Intelligence estimates that 50% of phone sales were online last year, up from 14.5% in 2013.

 

  • Reuters with addtional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

Flipkart, Amazon Accused of Unfair Samsung, Xiaomi India Tie-Ups

Amazon to Boost India Investment to $26 Billion by 2030

Amazon Cloud Unit to Spend $13 Billion in India by 2030

Amazon Launches Air Cargo Service in India as Online Sales Jump

Tencent Buys $264m Stake in India’s Flipkart – Economic Times

Walmart’s Flipkart Seen Eyeing $60-70bn IPO Target For 2023

India Aims to Break Amazon, Walmart’s Grip on E-Commerce

Amazon and Flipkart Fail In Last-Ditch Bid to Thwart India Antitrust Probe

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.