Google fires 28 staff after office sit-ins to protest cloud contract with Israel

18 April 2024, 14:54

California Google News
California Google News. Picture: PA

The workers held sit-ins at the company’s offices in California and New York over Google’s contract to provide custom tools for the Israeli military.

Google has fired 28 employees involved in protests over the tech company’s cloud computing contract with the Israeli government, according to statements from the company and campaigners.

The workers held sit-ins at the company’s offices in California and New York over Google’s 1.2 billion dollar (£963.1 million) contract to provide custom tools for Israeli’s military.

They were fired on Wednesday evening after police earlier arrested nine people.

Google said “a small number of employee protesters entered and disrupted a few of our locations.”

“After refusing multiple requests to leave the premises, law enforcement was engaged to remove them to ensure office safety,” Google said.

The company said it carried out “individual investigations that resulted in the termination of employment for 28 employees, and will continue to investigate and take action as needed.”

The group behind the protests, No Tech for Apartheid, disputed Google’s version of events, saying the company fired people who didn’t directly participate.

The company’s claim that the protests were part of a longstanding campaign by groups and “people who largely don’t work at Google” was untrue, the group said.

The group posted photos and videos on social media showing workers in Google offices holding placards and sitting on the floor, chanting slogans.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Trump Hush Money

Judge fines Trump for contempt and raises threat of jail in hush money trial

Australia Violence

Australian prime minister vows new funding to help women escape male violence

Reclassifying Marijuana

US poised to ease restrictions on marijuana in historic policy shift

Georgia Divisive Law

Georgian police deploy tear gas to disperse ‘Russian law’ protests

Israel Palestinians Campus Protests

Protesters taken into custody as police end university pro-Palestine occupation

APTOPIX Israel Palestinians Campus Protests

Shelter-in-place alert issued at Columbia University as police raid campus

Cafe on Omaha beach freed by Allies on D-Day slammed for refusing to serve British soldiers because they are English

Brits are welcome: French D-Day beach cafe owner who banned squaddies 'for being English' cites misunderstanding

An Amazon Prime vehicle

Amazon reports strong Q1 results driven by cloud-computing unit and Prime Video

The first migrant has officially been sent to Rwanda

First asylum seeker flown to Rwanda with £3,000 of taxpayer's cash under voluntary deportation scheme

Changpeng Zhao

Binance founder sentenced to four months in jail for allowing money laundering

A man carries dry cleaning past an armoured police vehicle in Port-au-Prince, Haiti

Haiti’s transitional council names new PM amid hopes of quelling violence

OpenAI’s ChatGPT app is displayed on an iPhone

US newspapers sue ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement

Israel Palestinians Campus Protests

Columbia University threatens to expel student protesters who occupied building

International Court Gaza Explainer

Netanyahu vows to invade Rafah ‘with or without a deal’

Cars queue to buy fuel at a petrol station in Lagos, Nigeria

Nigerians struggle with fuel shortages as queues form across major cities

Cafe on Omaha beach freed by Allies on D-Day slammed for refusing to serve British soldiers because they are English

Cafe on Omaha beach freed by Allies on D-Day slammed for refusing to serve British soldiers 'because they are English'