Fired, reinstated but out of office

 

 Potrebbero prendere il sole in spiaggia senza fare niente con la certezza di ricevere lo stipendio a fine mese. Invece vogliono la scrivania perché pretendono di lavorare. E la vertenza davanti al giudice del lavoro intentata da sei impiegati della Pfizer Italia contro l’azienda farmaceutica che da nove mesi impedisce ai lavoratori di entrare in sede e svolgere le loro mansioni. «E un caso di mobbing che ha il sapore della ritorsione», sostengono gli avvocati dei sei impiegati, i legali Giovanni Marcellitti e Alberica De Lorenzo.  «I nostri assistiti sono stati licenziati ma il giudice ha ordinato il reintegro. Pagarli senza farli lavorare sembra una vendetta».

This is the latest phase of a judicial dispute that has been pitting Pfizer since 2008 against the six employees assigned to internal services, dismissed six years ago with a dismissal declared void by the Rome court of appeal last September. A ruling that forced the pharmaceutical company to reinstate workers.

According to the device, in addition to the payment of salaries not received in recent years, they must get their badge, office, desk and computer back. However, the judge's ruling was disregarded and the six employees were not allowed to return: they are salaried but cannot do what they are paid for, i.e. carry out internal maintenance of the company premises. The protagonists of this story are Giovanni Marsan, Francesco Capoccetta, Fabiano Mocenigo, Stefano Moretti, Paolo Ronci, Claudio Tegazio.

Pzifer, however, decides to sell the company branch to Siram spa, which is responsible for hiring the six employees. The workers appealed the decision. It is then that the company first lays them off and fires them. Last September they won the case on appeal. But Pfizer is finding it difficult to enforce the judge's decision.

Giulio De Santis – 30 Giugno 2014 –  Corriere della Sera Roma

 

 

 

Exit mobile version