Three ex-bosses of French company jailed over employee suicides

Business

PARIS: A French court on Friday found the former CEO and other executives at France Telecom guilty of “institutional harassment” after the company was rocked by dozens of suicides during a vast corporate restructuring.

In the first ruling of its kind against a blue-chip French company, presiding judge Cecile Louis-Loyant said managers used “forbidden” methods to create “a climate of anxiety” in reaching the goal of cutting one in five jobs — 22,000 in total — within three years.

Presenting many of the departures as voluntary was “nothing but window-dressing”, the verdict added.

Thirty-five employees at the former state monopoly took their own lives in 2008 and 2009, an episode that sparked demands for action against “moral harassment” by bosses focusing ruthlessly on the bottom line at the expense of employees’ well-being.

Former chief Didier Lombard was given a one-year prison sentence, with eight months suspended, and the maximum fine of 15,000 euros ($16,700).

Thirty-five employees of France Telecom killed themselves in 2008 and 2009

His former deputy Louis-Pierre Wenes and human resources director Olivier Barberot received the same sentence, while France Telecom itself, since rebranded as Orange, was ordered to pay 75,000 euros.

Four other executives charged with “complicity in moral harassment” were given four-month suspended sentences and fines of 5,000 euros.

The defendants were also ordered to pay a combined three million euros to the plaintiffs as well as victims’ families.

Lombard’s lawyer, Jean Veil, said he and the others would appeal the ruling, calling it “a total misreading of the law”.

During the trial in July, Lombard denied that management bore any responsibility for the deaths, despite having told managers in 2006 that he would “get people to leave one way or another, either through the window or the door”.

“The transformations a business has to go through aren’t pleasant, that’s just the way it is, there’s nothing I could have done,” he told the court.

The victims’ families and unions accused France Telecom of systematic psychological abuse aimed at pushing out people at its nearly 23,000 sites across the country.

Evidence presented to the court painted a picture of intimidation: workers suddenly ordered to change the nature or location of their job, threats of pay cuts, and repeated emails encouraging people to leave in order to meet the job cuts goal.

In July 2009, a 51-year-old technician from Marseille killed himself, leaving a letter accusing bosses of “management by terror”.

The criminal investigation focused on the cases of 39 employees, including 19 of those who killed themselves, 12 who tried to, and eight who suffered from acute depression or were signed off sick.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *