Los Gatos Weekly Times

Google workers protest work with Israeli government

More than 2 dozen employees immediatel­y terminated after rallies, sit-in outside complexes in Sunnyvale

- By Stephanie Lam slam@bayareanew­sgroup. com Staff writer Nollyanne Delacruz contribute­d to this report.

Search giant Google fired 28 employees after they participat­ed April 16 in protests at company facilities — including in the Bay Area — where several people were arrested.

A company spokespers­on confirmed the firings to the Bay Area News Group on April 17.

Some 80 employees protested April 16 outside Google complexes in Sunnyvale, demanding the company drop Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion contract that provides cloud-computing services to the Israeli government, including military forces. Five people were arrested by Sunnyvale police on suspicion of criminal trespassin­g after a sitin at one of the company's buildings. Similar sit-ins and protests were held at Google office in New York.

After the protest cleared at 1:30 p.m., five people remained in the complex and were allowed to stay by Google, but refused to leave at 6:30 p.m. when they were asked to leave, according to Sunnyvale police Capt. Dzanh Le. The arrestees were booked at the Police Department and released on a citation that same night.

“We were called back by Google. They wanted the individual­s to leave but they refused the request,” Le said. “We asked them to leave, and they refused again.”

Google did not reveal how many of the 28 employees they fired had worked in the Bay Area.

The April 16 action against Project Nimbus followed a Time magazine report that Israel has its own Google Cloud “landing zone,” providing the government with a streamline­d way to store and process data and access AI services. Protesters have expressed concerns about the company potentiall­y using artificial intelligen­ce against civilians in Gaza.

Google stated that it operates the cloud in numerous government­s, including Israel, and that Nimbus work is “not directed at highly sensitive, classified or military workloads

relevant to weapons or intelligen­ce services.”

Advocacy group No Tech For Apartheid, which helped organize the protest, released a statement attributed to Google workers who are part of their campaign, condemning the firings and the project. They said that the sitin had taken place inside

the office of Thomas Kurian, the CEO of Google Cloud.

“This flagrant act of retaliatio­n is a clear indication that Google values its $1.2 billion contract with the genocidal Israeli government and military more than its own workers,” the group said in the statement. “In the three

years that we have been organizing against Project Nimbus, we have yet to hear from a single executive about our concerns.

“Google workers have the right to peacefully protest about terms and conditions of our labor. These firings were clearly retaliator­y.”

The Google protest came a day after hundreds of protesters blocked major freeways in the Bay Area and in several other U.S. cities to oppose the war in Gaza.

A statement from the company said that the fired employees violated company policies by physically impeding other employees' work and preventing them from accessing facilities.

The company stated that it conducted individual investigat­ions of each employee before the terminatio­n and will continue to investigat­e and take action as needed.

The No Tech For Apartheid statement said that “even the workers who were participat­ing in a peaceful sit-in and refusing to leave did not damage property or threaten other workers.

“These mass, illegal firings will not stop us,” the group added. “On the contrary, they only serve as further fuel for the growth of this movement.”

 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Google employees and other demonstrat­ors protest against the war in Gaza and Google's work with the Israeli government on April 16in front of the Google offices in Sunnyvale. Google fired 28employee­s for their participat­ion.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Google employees and other demonstrat­ors protest against the war in Gaza and Google's work with the Israeli government on April 16in front of the Google offices in Sunnyvale. Google fired 28employee­s for their participat­ion.

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