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French game workers union sues Ubisoft for 'institutional sexual harassment'


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A new filing by the Solidaires Informatique union in France names multiple former executives, CEO Yves Guillemot, and the company as a whole.

 

 

 

 

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(Image credit: Ubisoft Montreal)

The Solidaires Informatique union has filed a new complaint against Ubisoft with the courts in Bobigny, France, alleging that executives including CEO Yves Guillemot enabled and encouraged a culture of "institutional sexual harassment" at the company.

"In June 2020, dozens of testimonies emerged on social medias, quickly backed by articles from various outlets (Libération and Numérama in particular), reporting cases of sexual harassment within Ubisoft, with the complacency of the Human Resources departments, which was protecting the harassers and silencing the victims," Solidaires Informatique said in a translated statement sent via email.

"On July 15, 2021, a complaint was filed at the Bobigny criminal court by Maude Beckers, both representing the Solidaires Informatique union and several victims of the company."

Specifically named in the complaint are:

Tommy François, formerly Ubisoft's vice president of editorial and creative services, for allegedly taking advantage of his position in order to harass multiple people;

Serge Hascoët, former Ubisoft chief creative officer, for allegedly taking advantage of his position in order to harass multiple people and failing to prevent similar behavior by his subordinates;

Serge Hascoët's assistant, for allegedly taking advantage of his proximity to Mr. Hascoët and harassing multiple people;

Cécile Cornet, former global director of human resources, who allegedly allowed harassment to flourish within the company;

Several unnamed individuals from the Human Resources Department, for "having actively participating in covering up and hiding the harasser's actions";

Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot, not for any specific allegations but because "as CEO, he is responsible for what happens within the company."

"More importantly, the complaint targets Ubisoft as a company, for institutional sexual harassment," the union said. "For establishing, maintaining and reinforcing a system where sexual harassment is tolerated, because keeping harassers in place is deemed more profitable for the company than protecting employees. This harassment, tolerated and done by the upper echelons of the company, protected by the Human Resources departments, has created a company-wide system. Beyond the list of people mentioned above, this action seeks to dismantle the dynamics of this system."   

François, Hascoët, and Cornet are no longer with Ubisoft: All three departed the company last year amid allegations of workplace misconduct and abuse. Yannis Mallat, the managing director of Ubisoft's Canadian studios, and Ubisoft vice president Maxime Beland also resigned from the company over similar complaints. Guillemot apologized for the abuses in September 2020, but took no responsibility for them.

In more recent months, Guillemot has touted leadership changes at the company aimed at making Ubisoft "an exemplary workplace in the tech industry." Not everyone is convinced that things are actually changing, however, or that Guillemot has the ability to make it happen. A May report by Le Télégramme said some employees don't believe that meaningful changes are being made, leading to the #holdubisoftaccountable hashtag trending on Twitter. The report also said that the union was planning collective legal action against Ubisoft, presumably a reference to this complaint.

A Solidaires Informatique representative said that the union is filing the complaint now because it took roughly a year to collect evidence and testimonies, and put the case together. 

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