michaeldubai wrote:uaekid wrote:then regardless of how the case will turn you jumped to conclusions based on a phone call !! for all we know it could be a self defense and that your friend hates the Palestinian guy, we all hate supervisors LOL !!
best wishes for the Indian guy, I guess he can sue the whole companies for this
maybe I was wrong - I dont know - the case is not closed. he is just taken for questioning. remember that many of the arab guys sided with the supervisor. So its 5 people's word against one. he can still very well get away with it.
Your friend is between a rock and a hard place.
To step up and do the right thing would result in one of two things:
get fired (or made "redunant"), or become a target to his superiors and be ostrazised by his co-workers to the point of forcing him to leave, and he will never get a good reference for another job.
In today's environment I am sure he cannot afford to be made "redundant" nor would he want to work under stressful conditions. Somethings doing the wrong thing, by being quiet, is the only way to go. Although, having said that, I would certainly try to meet with the worker who was injured and explain why I could not come forward.
It's easy to say what he should or shouldn't do. If it were me, I would know in my heart that in spite of wanting to do the right thing, circumstances prevent me from doing so.
The other "witnesses" are openly siding with the supervisor in all probability in fear for their job.
Tell your friend that this is out of his hands.