Business World

Ex-Google workers: Firings for protesting Israel contract illegal

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A GROUP of workers at Alphabet, Inc.’s Google have filed a complaint with a US labor board claiming the tech company unlawfully fired about 50 employees for protesting its cloud contract with the Israeli government.

The single-page complaint filed late Monday with the US National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) alleges that by firing the workers, Google interfered with their rights under US labor law to advocate for better working conditions.

Google this month said it had fired 28 employees who disrupted work at unspecifie­d office locations while protesting Project

Nimbus, a $1.2-billion contract jointly awarded to Google and Amazon.com to supply the Israeli government with cloud services. The company last week said that about 20 more workers had been fired for protesting the contract while in the office.

In a statement on Tuesday, Google said the workers' conduct was "completely unacceptab­le" and made other employees feel threatened and unsafe.

“We carefully confirmed and reconfirme­d that every single person whose employment was terminated was directly and definitive­ly involved in disruption inside our buildings,” the company said.

The workers claim the project supports Israel's developmen­t of military tools. Google has said the Nimbus contract "is not directed at highly sensitive, classified, or military workloads relevant to weapons or intelligen­ce services."

Zelda Montes, a former Google employee who was arrested during a protest of Project Nimbus, said Google fired workers to suppress organizing and send a message to its workforce that dissent would not be tolerated.

“Google is attempting to instill fear in employees,” Ms. Montes said in a statement provided by No Tech For Apartheid,

an organizing group affiliated with some of the fired workers.

The workers in the NLRB complaint are seeking to be reinstated to their jobs with back pay and a statement from Google that it will not violate workers' rights to organize.

The NLRB general counsel, which acts as a prosecutor, reviews complaints and attempts to settle claims it finds to have merit. If that fails, the general counsel can pursue cases before administra­tive judges and a fivemember board appointed by the US president.

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