Indian-Origin Microsoft Engineer Protests Company’s Israel Ties, Resigns During Anniversary Event
Vaniya Agrawal, an Indian-origin software engineer in Microsoft’s AI division, gained international attention after disrupting the company’s 50th anniversary celebration. Agrawal publicly resigned during the event, protesting Microsoft’s business dealings with the Israeli government amid the ongoing conflict in Gaza.
)
During the event, Agrawal stood up and confronted Microsoft executives including Satya Nadella, Steve Ballmer, and Bill Gates. “Shame on you all. You’re all hypocrites,” she exclaimed. “50,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been murdered with Microsoft technology. How dare you. Shame on all of you for celebrating on their blood. Cut ties with Israel.”
In a mass email to colleagues following her protest, Agrawal elaborated on her reasons for resigning. She cited Microsoft’s cloud and AI technology enabling “the Israeli military to be more lethal and destructive in Gaza,” and described the company’s Azure cloud offerings and AI developments as forming “the technological backbone of Israel’s automated apartheid and genocide systems.”
Agrawal joined Microsoft a year and a half ago as the Gaza conflict escalated, witnessing what she described as “unspeakable suffering amidst Israel’s mass human rights violations – indiscriminate carpet bombings, the targeting of hospitals and schools, and the continuation of an apartheid state.” She emphasized that Microsoft’s technology was powering what she termed a “genocide” and that she could not continue working for a company complicit in such actions.
The protest was organized by a group called No Azure for Apartheid, part of a broader movement among Microsoft employees against the company’s dealings with Israel. Agrawal urged her colleagues to follow her example and resign in protest, calling on them to sign a petition demanding Microsoft cut ties with Israel.
This incident is part of a larger trend of employee activism in tech companies. In 2024, Google fired 28 employees who participated in sit-in protests against Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion cloud contract with the Israeli government. Similar protests have occurred outside the tech industry, such as staff at the Glasgow Film Theatre demanding a boycott of companies supporting Israel.
The Gaza conflict has seen over 50,423 Palestinians killed since October 7, 2023, according to the Gaza health ministry. The situation has drawn global condemnation, with various UN bodies and human rights organizations criticizing Israel’s actions.
Related Protests in Tech Industry
The protest at Microsoft is not an isolated incident. Tech employees are increasingly speaking out against their employers’ business dealings with governments accused of human rights violations. These actions reflect a growing trend of employee activism in the technology sector, particularly regarding sensitive geopolitical issues.
Humanitarian Impact
The ongoing conflict has resulted in significant humanitarian consequences, with thousands displaced and a substantial number of casualties. The international community continues to call for restraint and diplomatic resolution to the crisis.