The Jerusalem Post

Google fires 28 anti-Zionist employees who occupied offices in protest of its ties to Israel

- • By MICHAEL STARR

Google on Thursday fired 28 employees who had occupied its offices in protest of contracts with the Israeli government on Tuesday, a Google spokespers­on said.

The protesters were arrested and put on administra­tive leave after refusing to leave Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian’s Sunnyvale office or the New York City Chelsea workspace for almost 10 hours in a bid to push Google to cancel the Project Nimbus contract and cease business with the Israeli government.

“We have so far concluded individual investigat­ions that resulted in the terminatio­n of employment for 28 employees, and will continue to investigat­e and take action as needed,” said a Google spokespers­on.

“Physically impeding other employees’ work and preventing them from accessing our facilities is a clear violation of our policies, and completely unacceptab­le behavior. After refusing multiple requests to leave the

premises, law enforcemen­t was engaged to remove them to ensure office safety.”

No Tech For Apartheid, a project by Jewish Voice for Peace and Linda Sarsour’s MPower Change, said the terminatio­ns were an “indiscrimi­nate act of mass

retaliatio­n.”

The protest organizati­on said some of those fired had not directly participat­ed in the protest.

“Google is terrified of us. They are terrified of workers coming together and calling for accountabi­lity

and transparen­cy from our bosses,” No Tech for Apartheid said Thursday. “These mass, illegal firings will not stop us. On the contrary, they only serve as further fuel for the growth of this movement.”

The occupation­s of Google workspaces were joined by demonstrat­ions outside the premises and in Seattle, seeking to push Google to end participat­ion in the project for establishi­ng cloud-based data centers in a plan to move a majority of the Israeli government’s IT infrastruc­ture to cloud-based servers.

“These protests were part of a longstandi­ng campaign by a group of organizati­ons and people who largely don’t work at Google,” said Google.

No Tech for Apartheid has been seeking to disrupt business between Google and Israel since it and Amazon won the contract for Project Nimbus in 2021. It issued a public letter and started a petition against the contract, which had amassed 94,305 signatures by Wednesday.

At a 2022 annual stockholde­rs meeting, a No Tech for Apartheid proposal against Nimbus was rejected. In March, a Google employee was fired after interrupti­ng Google Israel CEO Barak Regev at an Israeli tech industry conference in New York City.

 ?? (Paresh Dave/Reuters) ?? EMPLOYEES OF Google and members of Jewish and Palestinia­n organizati­ons protest against cloud computing work by Google and Amazon for the Israeli government during a rally outside Google offices in San Francisco, back in 2022.
(Paresh Dave/Reuters) EMPLOYEES OF Google and members of Jewish and Palestinia­n organizati­ons protest against cloud computing work by Google and Amazon for the Israeli government during a rally outside Google offices in San Francisco, back in 2022.

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