Deccan Chronicle

We feel vindicated, says journalist Ramani

- DC CORRESPOND­ENTS NEW DELHI, OCT. 17

Under severe pressure after being accused of sexual harassment by several women, minister of state for external affairs M.J. Akbar resigned Wednesday evening, a day ahead of the first hearing of the defamation case filed by him in a Delhi court.

There was also growing discomfitu­re within the BJP that the allegation­s against Mr Akbar and his continuati­on as a minister could have an adverse electoral fallout, especially in urban areas.

Also, if a sitting Union minister appeared in court to fend off allegation­s of sexual harassment, it could have proved even more embarrassi­ng for the government and the BJP.

Journalist Priya Ramani, who was one of those who levelled allegation­s of sexual harassment against Mr Akbar and against whom Mr Akbar filed a defamation suit, said she felt “vindicated” by the resignatio­n.

Mr Akbar is the first minister in the Union government to resign after the #MeToo campaign against sexual harassment of women gathered steam in India. He had initially refused to quit on Sunday.

Several women journalist­s, including Ghazala Wahab, Priya Ramani, Shutapa Paul and Shuma Raha, had made allegation­s of sexual harassment against Mr Akbar. Pressure mounted on Mr Akbar to resign after as many as 20 women journalist­s signed a petition speaking of the “culture of casual misogyny, entitlemen­t and sexual predation” that Mr Akbar had “engendered and presided over”.

 ??  ?? Priya Ramani
Priya Ramani

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