The Phnom Penh Post

Uber launches probe

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UBER chief executive Travis Kalanick has announced an “urgent investigat­ion” at the ride-sharing company after a former employee wrote a blog post on Sunday alleging sexual harassment and sexism at the firm.

“What’s described here is abhorrent [and] against everything we believe in. Anyone who behaves this way or thinks this is OK will be fired,” Kalanick said on Twitter.

“I’ve instructed our [chief human resources officer] Liane Hornsey to conduct an urgent investigat­ion. There can be absolutely no place for this kind of behavior at Uber.”

Susan Fowler, an engineer who worked at Uber until the end of last year, said her manager made sexual advances shortly after she joined the company at the end of 2015.

She said she complained to more senior managers and the company’s human resources department but was told that it was the man’s “first offence” and that they wouldn’t feel comfortabl­e punishing a “high performer”.

Fowler said she was given the choice of joining another team, or staying in her position with the possibilit­y of receiving a poor performanc­e review from her manager.

Other the next few months, Fowler said she met other women engineers at the company who said they had also experience­d similar harassment, including alleged inappropri­ate behaviour from her previous manager.

After lodging various complaints of what she considered inappropri­ate behaviour, Fowler said she was told by her manager that she was “on thin ice” for reporting his boss to human resources.

The HR department, meanwhile, told her that she might be the problem, not the men she was reporting.

Fowler said she was blocked for a transfer and given a negative performanc­e review without justificat­ion.

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