In This Article:
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Barclays' whistleblowing policies 'only on paper' -judge
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Former IT manager awarded two years' pay by Indian court
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Had raised concerns over handling of data loss -judgment
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Barclays to appeal, hearing due on Oct. 20 -filings
By Lawrence White and Kirstin Ridley
LONDON, Oct 2 (Reuters) - Barclays is seeking to overturn a ruling by an Indian court that found the British bank had retaliated against a whistleblower, legal filings show.
The case concerns a former senior IT manager who raised concerns about how a data loss had been handled.
Barclays' whistleblowing policy "appears to be in existence only on paper", a District Court in the western Indian city of Pune said in a March 28 judgment published online, which was seen by Reuters and is reported here for the first time.
The Pune court ordered Barclays to pay Atul Gupta two years' salary, totalling around 9,600,000 Indian rupees ($115,620), saying the bank's Indian service company had made him redundant "in retaliation to his whistleblowing act".
A hearing for Barclays' appeal to the Bombay High Court is listed for Oct. 20, court records show. One source familiar with the case said the bank was attempting to strike out the award.
"Barclays is unequivocally committed to having a culture where colleagues feel comfortable to speak up when something isn't right and no employee is excluded from being able to raise a concern – by contract or otherwise," a bank spokesperson said.
"We take the protection of whistleblowers very seriously and have zero tolerance for whistleblower retaliation," the spokesperson added. They declined to comment on the specifics of the Indian case.
Barclays has faced other fines and regulatory censure for failing to protect people who raise red flags, after former chief executive Jes Staley in 2017 sought to unmask a whistleblower who had sent letters criticising a bank employee.
The Gupta case raises fresh questions about Barclays' whistleblowing procedures and whether they are being applied consistently across subsidiaries, said Francesca West, a lawyer who represents whistleblowers and who reviewed the judgment.
"Cases like this are seminal moments for big organisations, asking them 'whose side are we on?'," she said.
Email messages between the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Gupta, seen by Reuters, showed the whistleblowing team at Britain's markets regulator tracked the Indian case but does not plan "specific action".
The FCA, which has ordered banks to put in place clear internal processes to allow whistleblowing, declined to comment when asked by Reuters why it had decided against further action or whether it had asked Barclays about its handling of the matter.