Commission: Cargill Violated Muslims' Rights in Prayer Ban

Thursday, 10 August 2017 09:41 AM EDT ET

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has found reasonable cause that agribusiness giant Cargill violated the civil rights of Somali-American Muslim employees by refusing to allow them to pray during their breaks at a meatpacking plant in Colorado.

About 150 employees walked off the job at the Cargill's Fort Morgan plant in December 2015 after supervisors told them they would no longer be allowed to pray during their breaks. The company then fired the workers for violating attendance policies. The company based in Minnetonka, Minnesota, maintained the prayer break issue was a misunderstanding between supervisors and workers.

The Star Tribune reports Cargill and the employees now have a chance to settle the matter confidentially. A discrimination lawsuit is possible if a settlement cannot be reached.

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The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has found reasonable cause that agribusiness giant Cargill violated the civil rights of Somali-American Muslim employees by refusing to allow them to pray during their breaks at a meatpacking plant in Colorado.
US, Meatpacking Plant, Muslim Prayers, Cargill
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2017-41-10
Thursday, 10 August 2017 09:41 AM
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