The Borneo Post

Shock waves of #MeToo reach the City of London

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LONDON: A series of very public sackings, suspension­s and departures suggests that Britain’s finance world is waking up to the toxic implicatio­ns of sexual harassment and bullying in the workplace.

The changes come a little more than a year after the # MeToo movement exploded into public consciousn­ess with multiple allegation­s of predatory sexual behaviour against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein.

The campaign, in which women from a range of profession­s went public with allegation­s of harassment, quickly spread to Britain. Some of the most highprofil­e cases have come from inside the testostero­ne- fuelled world of business.

Some senior female executives who have already broken the glass ceiling have been instrument­al in accelerati­ng the pace of change.

At the beginning of the week, four major British auditing firms – Deloitte, KPMG, PwC and FY – announced they had shown the door to members of staff accused of sexual harassment or workplace bullying.

Deloitte alone revealed that it had fired 20 of its partners in Britain over the last four years for bullying and sexual harassment.

“We will fire people for any inappropri­ate behaviour. No one is protected,” Deloitte chief executive David Sproul told the Financial Times.

It was the FT that in January revealed the sexual harassment of hostesses at an all-male London charity dinner at the Presidents Club, attended by 360 businessme­n and politician­s.

Companies whose executives had attended rushed to distance themselves from the event and, within days of the scandal breaking, widespread condemnati­on led the club to announce its closure.

On Tuesday, Bloomberg reported that one of HSBC’S London-based executives had left the bank after being accused by a younger female staffer of “inappropri­ate conduct” in a New York hotel bar.

HSBC said in a statement: “An allegation was made against an individual. We dealt with it directly, robustly and appropriat­ely.”

In the insurance industry, around 50 companies signed up to a good conduct charter, the Inclusive Behaviours Pledge, to try to counter the problem of harassment.

One of its main backers was Inga Beale, at the time chief executive of Lloyds of London and known as an outspoken advocate for a more welcoming environmen­t for women in business.

She described the charter as a public commitment “to challenge inappropri­ate behaviour and create increasing­ly welcoming and inclusive workplaces for the diverse talent powering our sector”.

Beale, who became the first woman to head up a major insurance company in 2014, said she was proud of the progress made in this area since the 1980s. But she cautioned, “...the job isn’t over yet”.

There have been other revelation­s beyond the world of high finance.

Earlier this month, clothing company Ted Baker announced that chief executive Ray Kelvin had agreed to take a leave of absence following a series of “serious allegation­s” against him.

 ?? —AFP photo ?? Protesters hold up placards during the Women’s March in London.
—AFP photo Protesters hold up placards during the Women’s March in London.

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