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Nozima Husainova, a Citi Personal Banker, was terminated for making the anti-Semitic remark “No Wonder Hitler”

After the terrorist organization Hamas attacked Israel, Nozima Husainova, a 25-year-old woman working for the Citi banking company, was removed from her position for making terrible anti-Semitic remarks about Hitler and the Holocaust. The personal banker at the large financial company and City University of New York Brooklyn College graduate made the comment earlier this week on her Instagram account.

She removed her message, but the bank dismissed her on Thursday.

Husainova left a comment on a page regarding the Israeli-denied hospital bombing in Gaza. The bombing of Gaza City’s Ahli Arab Hospital claimed the lives of more than 200 people. Husainova said with a happy face emoji, “No wonder why Hitler wanted to get rid of them all.

Numerous social media users reacted negatively to her statement, which caught Citi’s notice when they included the bank in their posts. “We fired the employee who posted the abhorrent anti-Semitic remark on social media. A Citi spokeswoman said, “We condemn antisemitism and any hate speech and do not accept it in our bank.

Husainova, a finance graduate, attended the institution on Bedford Avenue in New York for five years. She also removed her LinkedIn page, which included the information that she had spent two years working at the Wall Street bank, whose parent firm Citigroup employs 240,000 people worldwide.

Choosing a side in the Israel-Palestine conflict in 2023 carries a price. University student organizations at Harvard and Oxford published declarations accusing Israel of carrying out the assault.

As a consequence, funding has been stopped, and numerous CEOs have said that they would not employ students who blamed Israel for the Hamas terror assault that claimed 1,400 lives.

For three students who claimed Israel was to responsible for the Hamas terrorist assaults, a prestigious company withdrew employment offers last week. The company Davis Polk revoked job offers from students who were in charge of clubs at Harvard and Columbia colleges who made derogatory remarks against Israel.

The company issued a statement stating that “the views in some of the statements signed by law school student groups recently go against our firm’s value system.”

The business noted that the “student leaders who signed these statements are not welcome in our firm” without naming the students. Neil Barr, managing partner and head of Davis Polk, said that the firm did not want to employ anybody who supported Hamas’s activities in Israel.

 

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