3 French Executives Convicted in Suicides of 35 Workers

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/20/world/europe/france-telecom-suicides.html

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PARIS — The former chief executive of one of France’s biggest companies and two subordinates were convicted on Friday of “institutional moral harassment” in the suicides of 35 employees in the mid-2000s, in a landmark ruling that represents the first time a French company has been held responsible for such a crime.

The chief executive, Didier Lombard, who led France Télécom, the former national telephone company that is now the telecommunications giant Orange, was sentenced to four months in prison and fined $16,000, as were the company’s second-in-command and its director of human resources at the time. Orange was fined the maximum $83,000.

The criminal court in Paris found that the three men were responsible for creating an atmosphere of fear during a desperate company restructuring that led directly to the suicides and attempted suicides of numerous employees.

Current and former workers gave wrenching testimony in a three-month trial this spring and summer about the severe anxiety that prevailed as the executives tackled a $50 billion debt by trying to get rid of 22,000 employees, out of a total of 120,000. Most of the employees were civil servants and thus could not be fired.

The court found on Friday that the ends in no way justified the methods. “The means chosen to reach 22,000 departures were illegitimate,” the court said in its ruling. The executives put in place “a conscious scheme to worsen the work conditions of the employees in order to speed up departures,” it said, and that the policy “created a climate of anxiety” that led to the suicides.

The executives said in the trial that workers had left the company voluntarily, a claim contradicted in the ruling and by Mr. Lombard’s own statements at the time. He told other company officials in 2006 that the employees would have to leave “by the window or the door.”

The former executives — Mr. Lombard; his second in command, Louis-Pierre Wenès; and the former human resources director, Olivier Barberot — said they would appeal the Paris court’s ruling.

Unions representing the employees hailed the convictions. “Let this serve as an example so that never again will there be such a policy of social violence,” the C.F.E.-C.G.C. union said on Twitter.

The wave of suicides, and the trial of the executives more than 10 years later, riveted France, a nation in which many have conflicted attitudes toward work and capitalism, visible in the current wave of strikes over the government’s plan to overhaul the pension system.

The testimony this year depicted a grim universe of underemployment, marginalization, miscasting and systematic harassment at France Télécom. Employees spoke of despairing colleagues who hanged themselves, set themselves on fire, or threw themselves out of windows, under trains and off bridges and highway overpasses as the company deliberately pushed them into roles for which they were unsuited — sales jobs for technicians, for instance — to try to reduce the work force.

The trial also highlighted the immobility of the French labor market, as most of the workers expected to stay at the company for the rest of their working lives, rarely considering changing employers or locations.