The Herald (South Africa)

India’s #MeToo storm grows

-

India’s belated #MeToo movement snowballed on Tuesday after several women journalist­s accused a minister in Narendra Modi’s government of sexual harassment and a producer alleged she was raped by a veteran Bollywood actor.

Women journalist­s took to Twitter to allege how MJ Akbar, a former editor and now a junior foreign minister, conducted job interviews in fancy hotel rooms and made sexual advances when they were starting out in the media.

Priya Ramani, the first journalist to go public with the allegation­s, identified Akbar as the unnamed editor whose inappropri­ate behaviour she had written about in an article last year.

Ramani said she was 23 when Akbar called her to a Mumbai hotel room for a job interview around 20 years ago.

Akbar was “an expert on obscene phone calls, texts, inappropri­ate compliment­s and not taking no for an answer,” she said in the article, which she reposted on Twitter on Monday.

“You know how to pinch, pat, rub, grab and assault,” she wrote.

“Speaking up against you still carries a heavy price that many young women cannot afford to pay.”

India’s foreign ministry was yet to respond to a request for comment and Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj ignored reporters when asked whether she would investigat­e the claims.

Akbar – who has edited prominent Indian newspapers such as The Telegraph, Asian Age and The Sunday Guardian and is a also a member of parliament – was yet to comment.

Another journalist, who preferred to remain anonymous, said she declined a job offer after “the whole experience of an interview sitting on a bed in a hotel room followed by an invitation to come over for a drink.”

Journalist Prerna Singh Bindra said Akbar made life at work hell when she refused his sexual overtures.

Many women in India have taken to social media in recent days to out sexual predators, emboldenin­g others to come out with their experience­s.

Manyh Bollywood figures, stand-up comedians and other top journalist­s have all found themselves accused of abusing their positions to behave improperly towards women.

The trigger appeared to be actress Tanushree Dutta, who has accused Bollywood actor Nana Patekar of inappropri­ate behaviour on a film set 10 years ago.

Late on Monday, writer and producer Vinta Nanda published a Facebook post saying she had not only been raped but brutalised and violated endlessly by a popular actor 19 years ago.

She did not name him directly but gave enough hints which led others in the Hindi film industry to quickly identify him on Twitter as Alok Nath.

“I am neither denying this nor do I agree with it,” said Nath, who is adored for his fatherly and genteel on-screen persona.

“It [rape] must have happened, but someone else would have done it,” the 62year-old actor said.

Bindra said Akbar made life at work hell when she refused his advances

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa