The retrenchment of the call centre workers was put down to finances and a new structure.
The documents claim all five workers are linked to one of the officials who had been stood down. This masthead has chosen not to name the workers to protect their wellbeing.
The sources said the court documents also allege interference with Eden’s role as assistant secretary.
They accuse senior leadership of restricting his access to the HWU’s membership database and claim emails from the Fair Work Commission were being automatically directed to junk mail.
The documents also claim many of the branch committee of management meetings where important decisions were made were called at short notice, without full agendas and with major announcements only revealed immediately before a vote.
The HWU is one Victorian branch within the national HSU, which is not subject to the allegations.
Lawyers for the national office have asked the Federal Court to give orders forcing the HWU to reinstate the five employees, reverse the stand-downs and that Asmar be stopped from carrying out her role as secretary.
The HSU has been seeking Asmar’s suspension since September, when the Fair Work Commission launched civil proceedings against her; her husband, David Asmar; and five senior members of the HWU executive team. The HSU is also seeking to have the HWU put into administration.
Diana Asmar has been accused by the Fair Work Commission of stitching up a multimillion-dollar “ghost printing” arrangement, alongside her husband.
The commission’s investigation into the Asmars – revealed in The Age – alleges a printing business received $2.7 million in HWU member funds for no service, with the money instead going into private accounts, and that more than $120,000 in reimbursements were claimed without evidence of relevant business expenses.
The HSU court claim says several senior members of the union had enabled Diana Asmar’s alleged misuse of union funds.
Asmar did not respond to a request for comment. While she has stood down from her national positions, she has so far resisted calls to step aside from her role at the Victorian branch. She has privately rejected the misappropriation allegations levelled against her.
Last week, lawyers for Asmar argued the civil proceedings should be stayed because of potential criminal proceedings relating to the same allegations regarding the printing business.
The director of the printing business, Peter Walsh, was arrested and interviewed by Victoria Police in November but was released pending further inquiries.
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Two search warrants were issued on May 15 at homes in Mount Eliza and Tullamarine in relation to the investigation. No charges have been laid.
The commission is also investigating why former CFMEU boss John Setka sent $180,000 in members’ fees to the ghost-printing scheme now being probed by police.
Setka also spoke at the October 23 conference, urging delegates to join the rebel unions splitting from the Labor Party and the broader union movement.
As part of the protracted court battle over putting the Victorian branch into administration, Asmar was accused in court documents of threatening to kill a key whistleblower and seeking to victimise Eden.
In those documents, revealed by this masthead in September, Asmar was alleged to have talked about sacking the same whistleblower and sending “personal photos” of them to the media as revenge.
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