Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Wipro's stunning silence over death of an employee

Yogesh Sapkale
 
The IT giant had reportedly admitted that one 
of its employees committed suicide after the company 
caught him embezzling $4 million in December. 
However, till date no criminal charges have been filed
against the employee.

It has been over two months since the body of 26-year-old
Anup Kumar Agarwal was recovered from railway
tracks between Byappanahalli and Krishnarajapuram stations. 
Mr Agarwal was working with IT giant Wipro Ltd
as an assistant manager in the finance department.

According to media reports, Mr Agarwal 
committed suicide shortly after the company
caught him embezzling $4 million (about Rs18 crore)
from its account.

Last week, Wipro had said it was conducting
internal investigations into alleged fraud by the 
employee who had gained access to a colleague's 
online password, and had embezzled funds for over a year.

The entire team of six employees that worked with 
Mr Agarwal has been sacked for negligence, said a news report.

Wipro had managed to recover around 50% of the 
embezzled amount and was not sure whether to file
charges in the case. However, there is a stunning 
silence over the whole episode and netizens are
raising questions over the company's responsibility.

From the limited facts narrated in the newspapers,
it appears that the offence is made out at least under
Section 379 of the India Penal Code (IPC) and 
Section 66 of the Information Technology Act, 2000.

Depending upon the facts to be revealed in this case,
Section 381 IPC (Theft by clerk or servant of property
in possession of master) may perhaps also be invoked and 
there could also possibly be a forgery-related offence. 

"However, none of these offences is covered in the legal 
obligations cast on members of the general public under 
Section 39 of the Criminal Penal Code, to report the 
offence to the police. Therefore, it may be difficult to hold 
Wipro legally responsible for not reporting the matter to the 
police, its moral obligation notwithstanding," said a legal expert.

Wipro officials were not immediately available for comments. 
We are not sure whether by not reporting the matter to the
authorities, the company was trying to recover its money or
shield its employee and reputation.

"The issue of non-reporting of such a matter to the police
may perhaps be stretched and called an act of 'mismanagement',
more so if a mala fide intention to save the employee (or the like) 
could be attributed to the management," said the legal expert.

According to a PTI report, the police had said that
Mr Agarwal has committed suicide, and his wife had 
given a statement in writing that her husband was going
through financial problems and was worried and hence 
had resorted to the extreme step.

The post-mortem report said he had died of shock and 
haemorrhage and had suffered multiple fractures.

DC Rajappa, Railway SP, Bangalore, told PTI that
Wipro had so far neither registered any complaint with 
the Railway Police nor asked for a probe. 
On the next course of action, he said no complaint 
was filed until now and the police will act on receiving one.

However, the death of Mr Agarwal and Wipro's silence
over the period has once again raised questions about corporate
governance procedures, especially after the Satyam fiasco.

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