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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
A former Citigroup executive claims in a lawsuit that she was dismissed after raising regulatory and compliance questions. A source familiar with the case said the concerns involved a request to open a bank account connected to President Donald Trump. The heavily redacted complaint, filed in Brooklyn federal court, was filed anonymously, using the pseudonym Jane Doe. The plaintiff, a former managing director in Citi's wealth management division, claimed she had identified deficiencies in Citi's internal controls for risk management, anti-money laundering, reputation risk, and data compliance. Citigroup has denied the allegations in the lawsuit and said it had "absolutely zero merit."
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Human Times
UK
The Trades Union Congress says that legislation proposed by Reform UK would remove the right for women to claim equal pay for the same work. Nigel Farage's party argues its Women's and Motherhood Protection Act would consolidate various protections for women into one law – superseding the 2010 Equality Act - and enhance pregnancy and maternity protections. Reform would rely on the Equal Pay Act 1970 and the Employment Rights Act 1996 to ensure pay and parental leave rights are preserved. But TUC boss Paul Nowak said Reform’s plans would effectively legalise discrimination and remove new rights being introduced by the Employment Rights Act, such as protection from harassment.
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Human Times
Europe
Workers at Czech Television and Czech Radio have called a strike to protest a planned government overhaul of a decades-old financing system. Critics say the changes will lead to cuts in funding and leave public television and radio stations vulnerable to political interference. The government earlier this week agreed on a plan to end the licence fees that have been the main source of funding for public broadcasters, and instead wants to finance them from the state budget. The chief of Czech Television said this could mean forced layoffs of about 300-500 of the station's 2,900 staff.
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Human Times
Middle East
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos has told attendees at the VivaTech technology conference in Paris that artificial intelligence will not replace humans; rather, it will lead to labour shortages. "I know there's a lot of concern that many people have, including many smart people, that AI is going to make humans redundant and so on," Bezos said. "I totally disagree with this point of view. And I think, in fact, AI is going to create a labour shortage." Bezos observed that people have "endless" things to do, and are currently limited by barriers that he said AI would lower.
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