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When HR Stops Being HR: A 5-Year Case Study of Silence, Pressure, and System Failure in Indian Workplaces

By shankar8214@gmail.com | April 17, 2026 | 0 Comments

Introduction: The Question No One Wants to Answer

HR is often introduced as the bridge between employees and management.

But over the last few years, a difficult reality has emerged:

👉 What happens when HR stops acting as a bridge—and starts acting as a filter?

This is not about blaming HR professionals.
This is about understanding where the system breaks down, and what happens when HR does not perform its duty.

The Case That Triggered the Question

🟥 Tata Consultancy Services Nashik Case (2022–2026)

At a BPO unit in Nashik:

  • Multiple women reported sexual harassment and coercion
  • Complaints spanned 4 years (2022–2026)
  • 9 FIRs were filed
  • A senior HR official was arrested

Investigations revealed something more serious than misconduct:

👉 HR allegedly ignored dozens of complaints, emails, and chats

👉 Internal responses included dismissive attitudes like “let it go”

👉 POSH mechanisms were not triggered despite repeated complaints

🔍 What This Case Actually Shows

This was not a lack of policy.

This was a failure of action.

  • Complaints existed
  • Evidence existed
  • HR was aware

👉 But the system did not move

🧠 Understanding the Core Failure: The “Ignored Complaint Loop”

This case reveals a pattern seen across organisations:

Step-by-step breakdown:

  1. Employee raises concern
  2. HR acknowledges informally
  3. No formal documentation
  4. No escalation
  5. Issue continues
  6. Employee complains again

👉 The loop continues—until it becomes a legal or criminal case

Expanding the Lens: A 5-Year Pattern (2021–2026)

The Nashik case is not isolated.

Ernst & Young India (2024)

  • Employee death linked to extreme workload and stress
  • Reports indicated:
    • Long working hours
    • Health impact on employees

👉 This was not a complaint-based issue
👉 It was a known cultural problem

HR Failure Here

This is a different type of failure:

👉 “Predictable Risk Failure”

  • Data showed:
    • Burnout
    • Overwork
  • HR still did not intervene

Two Types of HR Failure (Critical Insight)

Across multiple cases, HR failure falls into two categories:

1. Reactive Failure (Complaint-Based)

Example: TCS Nashik

  • Complaints exist
  • HR delays / ignores / handles informally

👉 Result:

  • Legal escalation
  • Police involvement
  • Organisational damage

2. Preventive Failure (Culture-Based)

Example: EY

  • No single complaint triggers action
  • But data shows risk

👉 HR does not act proactively

⚙️ Why Does HR Fail? (The Real Reasons)

Let’s move beyond theory.

1. Escalation Fear

HR often thinks:

  • “This will become a big issue”
  • “Leadership will question us”

👉 So issues are delayed or diluted

2. Business Protection Bias

HR prioritises:

  • Senior leaders
  • Revenue roles

👉 Over employee complaints

3. Informal Handling Culture

Very common mindset:

  • “Let’s not make it official”
  • “We’ll resolve internally”

👉 This is where compliance breaks

4. Lack of Ownership

No clear accountability:

  • Who in HR is responsible if things go wrong?

👉 Result:

  • Diffused responsibility
  • No action

⚖️ The Critical Turning Point: When HR Becomes Complicit

HR does not fail when it lacks knowledge.

HR fails when:

  • It knows there is a pattern
  • But chooses:
    • Not to document
    • Not to escalate
    • Not to act

👉 In serious cases, this can even be interpreted as indirect support of wrongdoing

đź§­ What HR SHOULD Do (Practical Framework)

Let’s make this actionable.

âś… Scenario 1: Repeated Complaint Against Senior Employee

Correct HR Approach:

1. Formalise immediately

  • Register complaint (no verbal handling)

2. Trigger POSH mechanism

  • Mandatory, not optional

3. Protect employee

  • Change reporting / workspace

4. Start inquiry

  • Even if business is impacted

👉 Key principle:
Serious complaints cannot be optional

âś… Scenario 2: Toxic Work Culture (Like EY)

Correct HR Approach:

  • Track:
    • Working hours
    • Attrition
    • Health indicators
  • Intervene:
    • Escalate to leadership
    • Document risks
    • Recommend structural changes

👉 Key principle:
If data shows risk, HR must act—even without complaints

đźš« What HR Should NEVER Do

This is where most organisations fail.

❌ Ignore repeated complaints

❌ Delay formal processes

❌ Protect high performers

❌ Convert serious issues into informal discussions

❌ Act as a shield for management

đź’Ą The Hard Truth

Across the last 5 years:

👉 The biggest issue is not lack of policy
👉 It is lack of action when it matters

đź§ľ Final Conclusion

The cases we’ve seen are not just incidents.

They are system signals.

They show what happens when:

  • HR delays
  • HR avoids
  • HR stays silent

⚖️ The One Line Every HR Must Remember

👉 If HR stays silent under pressure, it stops being HR and becomes part of the problem.

đź§­ The Way Forward

HR must redefine its role:

  • Not as management support
  • But as process custodian and compliance guardian

Because ultimately:

👉 Policies don’t protect employees
👉 People enforcing those policies do

✍️ Closing Note for HR Professionals

Every HR professional will face pressure at some point.

The real test is not:

  • How well you manage people

But:

  • How firmly you stand by process when it is uncomfortable

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