Laid-off Twitter Africa team allegedly 'ghosted' without severance pay or benefits
"Laid-off Twitter Africa team ‘ghosted’ without severance pay or benefits, former employees say", 17 July 2023
Former employees of Twitter Africa who were laid off as part of a global cost-cutting measure after Elon Musk’s acquisition have not received any severance pay more than seven months since leaving the company, several sources told CNN.
In late May, the former employees, who were based in the Ghanaian capital Accra, accepted Twitter’s (TWTR) offer to pay them three months worth of severance, the cost of repatriating foreign staff and legal expenses incurred during negotiations with the company, but they have not received the money or any further communication, the sources said.
“They literally ghosted us,” one former Twitter Africa employee told CNN.
The former employees say they reluctantly agreed to the severance package without benefits, even though it was less than what colleagues elsewhere received.
The former employees spoke to CNN on condition of anonymity because they said they were asked to sign non-disclosure agreements as part of their exit terms.
According to Carla Olympio, an attorney who is representing the former employees, the last communication from Twitter or its lawyers was in May, shortly after settlement was agreed.
CNN reached out to Twitter for comment on the status of the severance package for the former employees in the Ghana office but received an automated response – a poop emoji. It’s unclear whether Twitter still has a media relations department.
CNN also asked Ghana’s Ministry of Employment and Labor Relations for comment. A spokesperson said they are investigating the claims.
Whether Ghanaian authorities can compel Twitter to comply with the settlement is uncertain. The former employees and their attorney say the offer was never finalized.
Recently opened office
The dozen or so team members were laid off just four days after the social network opened a physical office in Accra last November.
Some of them said they had moved to Ghana from other African nations, and depended on their jobs at Twitter to support their legal status in the country.