Ex-workers of Twitter in the UK are also exploring legal action, while the employees of Ghana's sole Twitter office have retained counsel as well. According to a lawyer for some of those fired after billionaire Elon Musk took charge, the number of former Twitter employees suing the social media behemoth "increases everyday." According to Lisa Bloom, she is already defending over 100 former Musk-fired employees who are suing Twitter for contract violations and discrimination. Ex-Twitter workers are suing the firm over the layoffs from all around the world, including those who worked in Ghana, the company's lone branch in Africa.One of Bloom's customers, Amir Shevat, a product head who is subordinate to 150 employees, told the BBC that Musk had "failed" and recalled the upheaval following the $44 billion takeover.Shevat said that almost all of his team members were let go in a single evening. "We received an email informing us of a restructure, and then... My team and I were in communication, and one by one they were notifying me that their computer had "bricked."You can't log in and can't do anything with that computer since it has been "bricked," which is the process of turning a computer into something that looks like a brick.Shevat stated that while he was not against labour reductions, the manner in which it was carried out at Twitter worried him. Engineers who "truly cared" about the company were also sacked, which made them dejected. "It must be done in a morally upright, sympathetic, and highly communicative manner. And in all of these, Elon's leadership was unsuccessful "said he. Employees who were laid off were given the promise of four months' salary as severance but ultimately received only one month, with "zero rationale," he told the BBC. Approximately half of Twitter's 8,000 employees were let go when Musk became CEO.