|  | Posted by MI5Victim on 12/27/06 06:50 
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= harassment at work -=
 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
 
 Once I stopped watching television and listening to the radio at the end of
 1990, "they" had to find other ways of committing abuses. So they took what
 must be for them a tried and tested route; they get at you by subversion of
 those around you. Since they wouldn't be able to do that with my family or
 friends, that meant getting at people in the workplace to be their
 mouthpieces and do their dirty work for them.
 
 They supplied my employers in Oxford with details from what was going on in
 my private life, and what I and other people had said at my home and
 accommodation in Oxford. So people at work repeated verbatim words which
 had been said in my home, and repeated what I'd been doing recently. Often
 the most trivial things, the ones from your domestic life, are the ones
 which hurt most. One manager in particular at Oxford continuously abused me
 for ten months with verbal sexual abuse, swearing, and threats to terminate
 my employment. After ten months I was forced to seek psychiatric help and
 start taking medication, and was away from work for two months. I spoke
 later with a solicitor about what had happened at that company; he advised
 it was only possible to take action if you had left the company as a result
 of harassment, and such an action would have to be started very soon after
 leaving.
 
 Over a year later the same manager picked on another new worker, with even
 more serious results; that employee tried to commit suicide with an
 overdose as a result of the ill-treatment, and was forced to leave his job.
 But he didn't take action against the company, either. Abuse at work is
 comparable to that elsewhere in that tangible evidence is difficult to
 produce, and the abusers will always have their denials ready when
 challenged. And even if a court accepts what you say happened, it still
 remains to prove that abuse causes the type of breakdown I had at the end
 of 1992. In a recent case before a British court, a former member of the
 Army brought a case against others who had maltreated him ten years
 previously. Although the court accepted that abuse had occurred, it did not
 agree that depressive illness necessarily followed, and denied justice to
 the plaintiff.
 
 384
 
 
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