Payout for Pole who was called ‘Borat’ at work
Adrian Ruda, of Wakefield engineering firm TEi, was found by a tribunal panel to have been “degraded and humiliated” by the name given to him by a colleague.
The Leeds tribunal said Mr Ruda, an engineering supervisor, was called Borat over a four-week spell in 2007 by one of the welders in his charge.
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Hide AdIt ruled that someone who was not from Eastern Europe would not have been called Borat – the name of a Kazakh character created by comedian Sacha Baron Cohen – and so Mr Ruda “had been the subject of direct race discrimination”.
The tribunal said Mr Ruda was also called “gay” by his colleagues.
And it said he often responded to the jibes with the phrase: “I love you”, which was his way of diffusing situations.
Employment judge Jonathan Whittaker said: “Although the majority, if not all, other employees had nicknames applied to them, the examples of other nicknames which were given to the tribunal were not in any way associated with the racial or national origins of the persons in question.
“The application of the nickname ‘Borat’ violated the claimant’s dignity in the period in question and created for him a degrading, humiliating and defensive working environment.”