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Indian-American fired for speaking in Hindi with dying kin: Report

06:22 AM Aug 01, 2023 IST | IANS
indian american fired for speaking in hindi with dying kin  report
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New York, Aug 1: A 78-year-old Indian-American engineer has claimed that he was fired from his job for speaking in Hindi with a dying relative on phone last year, the media reported.

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Anil Varshney filed a lawsuit against missile defence contractor Parsons Corporation and US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, alleging systemic discriminatory actions by the company, according to a report in AL.com.

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He was “wrongfully terminated” after a white co-worker heard him speaking Hindi on a telephone call, lasting approximately two minutes, with his dying brother-in-law in India on September 26, 2022.

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The suit claimed that the other worker “falsely and intentionally” reported that Varshney “committed a security violation by revealing confidential information and/or accepting this call during a confidential meeting or with confidential information in the background of the call”.

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Varshney said in his lawsuit that there was no confidential or classified information anywhere near the call.

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According to him, the cubicle where he accepted the video call was completely empty “with no office material or wall hangings in the cubicle, and there was no confidential information being exchanged nearby”.

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“Despite there being no policy prohibiting the call, and without any investigation, defendants claimed Varshney committed a serious security violation and fired him,” the lawsuit, filed in June in the Northern District of Alabama, read.

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“Worse, they blackballed him from future work, effectively ending his career and life of service to Missile Defense Agency (MDA) and the UA government,” the lawsuit added.

Varshney provided “engineering support for the development of integrated and layered MDAs, which defend the US and allied partner forces against ballistic missile threats.

Parsons denied any wrongdoing on its part in a response filed with the court on July 24.

In addition, it asked for the suit’s dismissal with prejudice, and that Varshney pay its attorneys’ fees and costs, the news website reported.

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