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Devastating repercussions of calling out misbehaviour at work | Letters

One reader has not been able to find work years after she reported a sexual assault by her boss, while another had to quit because of discrimination by powerful women. Plus a letter from Graeme Booth, also replying to a Gaby Hinsliff columnI’m writing in response to Gaby Hinsliff’s column (White men are apparently terrified of doing the wrong thing at work. I have some advice, 26 May). I was sexually assaulted at work by a man twice my age – my boss. I reported it to my company and to the police. I pursued legal justice. I spoke openly about what had happened. And I lost my job and haven’t worked since.This isn’t from a lack of trying. I would love to be working again. I’m a well-educated woman in my 30s – I have a postgraduate degree, I’ve worked for the Foreign Office and the BBC, I speak Arabic and French. I’ve been working since I was 13. Even as I changed countries and careers in my 20s, I was never unemployed – until now. Continue reading...

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