A head of department at Imperial College London has dismissed
complaints made against him of bullying as a conspiracy to oust him from
his position and replace him with his deputy.
Philippe Froguel,
head of the department of genomics of common disease at Imperial, made
the claim last week during cross-examination at an employment tribunal
case brought by Robin Walters, a former researcher in the department.
Dr
Walters, who is now a senior scientist at the University of Oxford, was
dismissed by Imperial at the end of 2011 after he refused to work under
Professor Froguel any longer.
Dr Walters is claiming unfair
dismissal, as well as victimisation, harassment and discrimination, and
alleges that various abusive encounters with Professor Froguel during
2011 – including one during which he claims he was shouted at for being
autistic – had left him suffering from acute adjustment disorder, which
results in feelings of depression and anxiety.
Dr Walters is
married to Alexandra Blakemore who, at the time, was a reader and
Professor Froguel’s deputy. She also lodged complaints of victimisation,
harassment and discrimination against Professor Froguel, but her case
was settled before hearings began. She is now a professor of human
molecular genetics in Imperial’s department of medicine.
At the
hearing, Professor Froguel said he had regarded Dr Walters as his
friend, whose recruitment he had spearheaded and for whom he had been
determined to secure a permanent lectureship. An opportunity to bring in
the necessary funding to achieve this had arisen in 2010, when Imperial
was invited to participate in a European Union-funded project, known as
Imidia, to improve diabetes treatment.
However, when Professor
Froguel’s work relations with Professor Blakemore began to break down in
early 2011, Dr Walters claims he was targeted by Professor Froguel
because of his relationship to her.
Professor Froguel strongly denied having threatened to destroy Professor Blakemore’s career or to sack Dr Walters.
He
told the hearing that he had occasionally been “hard and abrasive”
towards Dr Walters, such as when he made the remark about autism. “But
99 per cent of the time I have been extremely gentle,” he said, adding
that no one had complained about him in the past two and a half years.
The
tribunal heard that three other members of junior staff at Imperial
made complaints about Professor Froguel’s behaviour in the summer of
2011. It also heard that a faculty review in 2011 concluded that his
management had sometimes been “tactless and direct” and that a human
resources manager reported he had been warned to take a “gentler”
approach.
But he attributed this glut of complaints in 2011 to a
“conspiracy”. “They were a gang headed by [Professor] Blakemore [whose
aim was] to have me sacked or put on sick leave or sabbatical and [for
her] to take the lead as acting head of department,” he said.
From: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/imperial-employment-tribunal-conspiracy-claim/2010712.article
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