Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indian-Origin Man Varinder Singh Compensated For Being Sexually Harassed In New Zealand

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2015 11:54 AM
  • Indian-Origin Man Varinder Singh Compensated For Being Sexually Harassed In New Zealand
A New Zealand court has awarded more than $35,000 to an Indian-origin man after he was fired for complaining about sexual harassment by his senior, a media report said.
 
The Employment Relations Authority directed Wellington-based Wellywood Backpackers' manager Ravichandiren NarayaNasamy to pay his former employee Varinder Singh $7,500 compensation for his personal grievance, $10,948 in lost wages and $14,067 in wage arrears, the New Zealand Herald reported on Monday.
 
According to Singh, NarayaNasamy sent him explicit text messages, including one that said "I need to have sex with u soon."
 
He told the court that when he complained about the sexual harassment on July 22, 2014, he was warned he would be fired for complaining.
 
Singh was fired on August 1, 2014. He told the court that NarayaNasamy threw his belongings out of his room in the hostel and then physically abused him.
 
NarayaNasamy, however, said that Singh lost his employment due to laziness and was trying to blackmail him for money.
 
He also claimed that the explicit text message was sent to Singh by mistake, but failed to prove his innocence when his former employee submitted before the court more text messages that were "personal, intrusive and of a sexual nature".

MORE National ARTICLES

All Sides Await Outcome In Battle Over B.c. Law School Accreditation

The university wants the court to overturn a law society decision denying accreditation to graduates of the university's proposed law school.

All Sides Await Outcome In Battle Over B.c. Law School Accreditation

Boy, 10, Catches 486-Pound Bluefin Tuna Off Prince Edward Island's Northeastern Shore

Boy, 10, Catches 486-Pound Bluefin Tuna Off Prince Edward Island's Northeastern Shore
A 10-year-old boy from Prince Edward Island is hoping he landed a world record when he reeled in a 220-kilogram bluefin tuna off the province's northeastern shore.

Boy, 10, Catches 486-Pound Bluefin Tuna Off Prince Edward Island's Northeastern Shore

Harper, Trudeau Spar Over Liberal Plan To Rebuild Infrastructure, Run Deficits

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau is out to build some campaign momentum with a big-ticket, multibillion-dollar infrastructure plan — and Stephen Harper is wasting no time in trying to tear him down.

Harper, Trudeau Spar Over Liberal Plan To Rebuild Infrastructure, Run Deficits

Rescuers Remember Katrina And Pledge Improved Readiness In Case Of B.C. Quake

Rescuers Remember Katrina And Pledge Improved Readiness In Case Of B.C. Quake
The Heavy Urban Search and Rescue team has announced plans for a major exercise next June on Vancouver Island.

Rescuers Remember Katrina And Pledge Improved Readiness In Case Of B.C. Quake

NHL Player Mike Richards Charged By RCMP In Manitoba With Possession Of Controlled Substance

NHL Player Mike Richards Charged By RCMP In Manitoba With Possession Of Controlled Substance
EMERSON, Man. — Police in Manitoba have charged NHL player Mike Richards with possession of a controlled substance.

NHL Player Mike Richards Charged By RCMP In Manitoba With Possession Of Controlled Substance

Smoke From Washington State Fires Casts Pall Over Some Okanagan Businesses

Smoke From Washington State Fires Casts Pall Over Some Okanagan Businesses
Heavy smoke sweeping in from Washington state wildfires is causing some tourists to blow off their Okanagan vacations, say business people around Kelowna, B.C.

Smoke From Washington State Fires Casts Pall Over Some Okanagan Businesses