Monday, May 13, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin Man Gets 2.9 Million US Dollars After Bad Reference Cost Him Job

IANS, 15 Aug, 2017 12:48 PM
  • Indian-Origin Man Gets 2.9 Million US Dollars After Bad Reference Cost Him Job
An Indian-origin man in Singapore has got 4 million Singaporean dollars ($2.9 million) in damages from his previous employer after a scathing reference letter by them cost him the chance to get a new job.
 
 
Ramesh Krishnan had accused AXA Life Insurance Singapore of defaming him while providing references on his work performance in 2012, the Strait Times reported on Tuesday.
 
 
Justice George Wei noted on Monday that the stands of both parties had been "polar opposites" when it came to damages. Ramesh had sought 63 million Singaporean dollars, while AXA urged he should be awarded only a nominal sum of 1 Singaporean dollar.
 
 
Mr Krishnan lost his initial defamation suit in 2015, but the Court of Appeal later ruled that AXA had breached its duty of care to him, the report said.
 
 
The court had also noted AXA's breach of duty led Prudential Assurance Company Singapore not to hire Ramesh.
 
 
When the firm in which Mr Krishnan had applied for a job asked AXA for the reference, it wrote back saying: "He showed a very poor 13th month persistency rate" -- meaning that many of his clients did not stick with their policies -- and "we are very concerned as to whether the clients have been provided with proper advice".
 
 
The Court of Appeal said this would have given the mistaken impression that Ramesh was not competent, and did not square with the evidence that he was one of "AXA's best financial services directors" and it had earlier persuaded him not to resign.
 
 
"People must know that justice is served. Somebody must go out there and make a point," said Ramesh, after the ruling.

MORE International ARTICLES

James Damore, The Google Employee Fired For His Anti-Diversity Manifesto By CEO Sundar Pichai

James Damore, The Google Employee Fired For His Anti-Diversity Manifesto By CEO Sundar Pichai
A memo written by a male engineer at Google about gender differences sparked a quick rebuttal from Google after it circulated widely online.

James Damore, The Google Employee Fired For His Anti-Diversity Manifesto By CEO Sundar Pichai

Not Going To Run Scared From North Korea: Nikki Haley

Not Going To Run Scared From North Korea: Nikki Haley
The US and the international community is “not going to run scared from North Korea”, US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley has said after Pyongyang refused to roll back its nuclear weapons programme.

Not Going To Run Scared From North Korea: Nikki Haley

Wisconsin Sikh Tragedy Forms Mission To Combat Hatred

Wisconsin Sikh Tragedy Forms Mission To Combat Hatred
In the five years since a white supremacist fatally shot six worshippers at a Milwaukee-area Sikh temple, those affected by the tragedy have remained united by a mission to combat hatred.

Wisconsin Sikh Tragedy Forms Mission To Combat Hatred

Senate Confirms Indian Americans Neil Chatterjee, Vishal Amin, And Krishna Urs To Key Positions

Senate Confirms Indian Americans Neil Chatterjee, Vishal Amin, And Krishna Urs To Key Positions
The Senate has unanimously confirmed three Indian-Americans to key government positions, including one as the Trump administration’s czar on intellectual property--an area of sharp differences between the US and India.

Senate Confirms Indian Americans Neil Chatterjee, Vishal Amin, And Krishna Urs To Key Positions

Hindus Are Thugs Who Killed Muslims, To Blame For Partition, Say Pak Textbooks

Hindus Are Thugs Who Killed Muslims, To Blame For Partition, Say Pak Textbooks
Pakistani high school student Noman Afzal knows “traitorous” Hindus are to blame for the bloodshed that erupted when British India split into two nations 70 years ago. His history textbook tells him so.

Hindus Are Thugs Who Killed Muslims, To Blame For Partition, Say Pak Textbooks

Petitioner Welcomes Cabinet Nod To Proxy Voting For NRIs

Petitioner Welcomes Cabinet Nod To Proxy Voting For NRIs
Shamsheer Vayalil, who filed a petition in the Supreme Court demanding voting rights for the NRIs, on Friday welcomed the Union government's decision to clear a proposal to allow proxy voting to overseas Indians.

Petitioner Welcomes Cabinet Nod To Proxy Voting For NRIs