"Though we do not comment on ongoing lawsuits, both employees - Manoj Punja, 54, and Shreya Ukil, 39 - were relieved from service after an impartial inquiry established that they had violated our stated policy," Wipro said in a statement here.
The IT bellwether's statement came in response to a media report in London that Ukil had accused the company of gender discrimination, unequal pay and harassment and sought compensation up to one million pounds (nearly Rs. 10 crores).
According to the media report, Ukil filed the lawsuit with the central London employment tribunal, claiming that she was forced into an affair by Punja, a married man who was her superior as head of Wipro's back office operations in Britain.
"I was also paid far less (GBP 75,000 a year) compared with GBP 150,000 per annum paid to male colleagues," Ukil, who was sales and market development manager, charged.
Ukil alleged that the company's culture required women to be subservient and as a result, many other women employees had left owing to similar experiences.
The company, however, said its policy on conflict of interest required employees to disclose to it any personal relationship that could create conflict.
"Failure to disclose such relationships would result in disciplinary action, including and up to separation," the company asserted in the statement.
Claiming that the company had serious objection to scurrilous allegations, the statement said it would take legal action against insidious and defamatory charges.
For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.