KATE Forbes has urged a retail chain giant to avoid redundancies if they push ahead with plans to close a Scottish call centre which employs hundreds of staff.

H&M workers at the company’s Waverley Gate office in Edinburgh were told last week of a proposal to shut the building by December of this year due to the lease expiring in 2025.

Staff have said that the meeting to announce the redundancies was over within five minutes, leaving those affected in shock.

READ MORE: Company with stores in Scotland collapses into administration

Around 200 employees are believed to be at risk of losing their jobs, with staff reporting fears that their jobs would be outsourced abroad.

Forbes (below) – Deputy First Minister and Economy Secretary – is understood to have met H&M management on Monday to discuss the situation, where she asked them to consider all options before going ahead with any job cuts.

A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: “This is a concerning time for employees and their families, who will be anxious about their jobs and livelihoods.

“The Deputy First Minister has spoken to H&M senior management and urged the company to consider all available options that could remove the need for redundancies."

READ MORE: Kate Forbes launches £880k fund to teach 'next generation of Scottish entrepreneurs'

She added that the government's Partnership Action for Continuing Employment (PACE) initiative would be offered to staff if the closure went ahead.

The H&M proposal will see a collective consultation meeting taking place in mid-September, with individual consultations following in October and November.

The office would then shut in the last week of November.

A spokeswoman for H&M said: "We constantly evaluate how we operate to ensure that we deliver on our goals and contribute to the overall success of the company.

"The current lease agreement for our customer service site in Edinburgh will end in March 2025. In connection with the lease soon ending, we looked into the scope of our operational set-up at the site to ensure that it is flexible and cost-efficient given current and future change in demands."

She added the company were doing everything they could to help colleagues but could not provide further details on the number at risk of redundancy.

The firm shut 250 stores globally in the aftermath of Covid-19 outbreak, as the pandemic had moved more shoppers online.