Game
Pro-Iranian group in Iraq says it launched drone attack on occupied Jordan Valley
字号+ Author: Source:Sport 2025-01-16 04:45:09 I want to comment(0)
An Ernst & Young (EY) office in western India, which employed a 26-year-old who allegedly after faci
An Ernst & Young (EY) office in western India, which employed a 26-year-old who allegedly after facing a high workload, has operated since 2007 without a state permit which regulates work hours, a senior government official told . EY faces scrutiny in India over the death of audit executive Anna Sebastian Perayil, which her mother blamed on a “backbreaking” workload in a letter to EY India’s chairman. The incident has already sparked a federal government investigation. The need for better efforts to shield employees in high-pressure jobs from faltering physical and mental health has been discussed widely after the death of a junior banker at Bank of America in May, and with JPMorgan last week creating a new role to tackle such concerns. Maharashtra’s additional labour commissioner, Shailendra Pol, whose team inspected the EY office in the western city of Pune, said it was operating without a mandatory registration under the state’s Shops and Establishments Act. The law caps the maximum working hours for adults at nine hours each day and 48 hours each week. “The company applied for a registration with the labour department only in February 2024 and we rejected it because it had not applied since 2007 when it started this office,” Pol told on Tuesday, adding that EY has been given seven days to explain the lapse. If non-compliance with the law results in an accident causing serious bodily injury or death of a worker, it could lead to imprisonment of up to six months, or a fine of up to 500,000 rupees ($5,979), or both. EY India did not immediately respond to a request for comment from . It has previously said that it placed “the highest importance on the well-being of all employees” and was “taking the family’s correspondence with the utmost seriousness and humility”. Perayil’s mother, Anita Augustine, alleged her daughter faced an “overwhelming workload” in her letter, which went viral on social media. “She worked late into the night, even on weekends, with no opportunity to catch her breath.” Perayil’s family has said she died of cardiac arrest. Pol said his team has also sought details from EY including the company’s logbook for employee hours, welfare policies, and whether Perayil was asked to work excessively during her four months as an associate at the accounting giant. EY said it works with about 100,000 people at its member firms in India.
1.This site adheres to industry standards, and any reposted articles will clearly indicate the author and source;
Related Articles
-
Rune comes back from brink to move into Japan Open semis
2025-01-16 04:06
-
Two women die in road accident
2025-01-16 03:41
-
Two sent to prison in sexual assault case
2025-01-16 03:17
-
Wildlife department seizes ‘marsh crocodile’ in Kasur
2025-01-16 02:53
User Reviews
Recommended Reads
Hot Information
- Killing valuable Hezbollah members will not beat it, Iran says
- KP opposition accuses PTI of trying to incite violence through rallies
- Lahore policewoman publicly shot dead by male colleague
- Poet's Corner
- Punjab approves two new rice varieties
- Trust deficit prevails as kidnapping probe proceeds
- 5 more killed, 15 injured in KP’s Kurram clashes as latest wave of violence enters 8th day
- Robbers kill shopkeeper
- IMF board stresses sustained programme implementation, widening tax base
Abont US
Follow our WhatasApp account to stay updated with the latest exciting content