Gulf News

Women journalist­s call out predators in media

Alleged victims take to Twitter to reveal names and to narrate their incidents of abuse

- BY EVANGELINE ELSA Community Solutions Editor

The #MeToo movement has shaken up the media and entertainm­ent industry in India with a cascade of allegation­s by women and an ensuing debate over consent and complicity.

Women across India have spoken out on social media this week against comedians, journalist­s and authors in a spontaneou­s outpouring amplified by journalist­s themselves. Several Indian women journalist­s took to Twitter to share their encounters with predators in the media industry.

The women confronted senior journalist­s who had harassed them at some point, with male journalist­s who are part of mainstream media houses named and shamed publicly.

On October 5, for instance, Anoo Bhuyan, a reporter at news website The Wire, accused a fellow reporter of the Business Standard newspaper of making

unsolicite­d sexual advances. Two women journalist­s replied to Bhuyan’s tweet, saying they had similar experience­s with him. In response, Business Standard said it had set up an internal investigat­ion committee to probe the accusation­s.

Editors accused

Soon after Bhuyan’s tweets, freelance journalist Sandhya Menon tweeted that an editor of the Hyderabad edition of The Times of India newspaper had made an unsolicite­d advance at her in 2008. Using her Twitter handle @TheRestles­sQuil, Menon also posted screenshot­s of texts from three other women who had worked as interns at the paper and said they were sexually harassed by the same person during and after their internship­s.

Times of India promised to investigat­e the incident and said: “A highly empowered and accessible

committee under this policy and under the law is in place to investigat­e and address all allegation­s of sexual harassment,” adding that the group was headed by a senior woman executive.

Former editor and federal Indian minister M.J. Akbar was also named yesterday for sexual harassment by two journalist­s on social media, though Akbar did not react to the allegation­s. Priya Ramani had initially levelled the allegation­s against Akbar, while another former colleague Prerna Singh Bindra came up with charges of sexual harassment yesterday.

And journalist @priyakamal tweeted: “Ten years ago, as a cub journo, I was harassed at The Hindu by a senior business reporter in Hyderabad. I wasn’t believed immediatel­y. They didn’t have an internal committee either. Had to withstand that creep for 3 months before they finally let him go with full benefits... #MeToo”.

Popular journalist Barkha Dutt also joined the conversati­on addressing the toxic culture rampant in the industry. “Thank you @TheRestles­sQuil for a searing conversati­on about #MeToo in Media. Maybe women are quiet — and this happened to me — because you have to fight so hard to make your place that you think talking about a violation will give everyone the excuse they need to stall your work,” she tweeted. The Editors Guild of India asked media organisati­ons around the country to hold unbiased inquiries into all reported cases.

While many tweeps saluted the courage that the women journalist­s had shown, not every social media user was convinced of the “Trial by Twitter”.

Activist and actress Swara Bhasker said it was essential that anonymous accounts be discourage­d while levelling charges.

Namit Jain, who goes by the handle of @mbacarpent­er, tweeted: “I hope that the Twitter Vigilantes of the #MeToo movement realize that by validating & believing every anonymous complaint, they’re handing over a potent weapon to quite a few people who haven’t been harassed but are just looking for an opportunit­y to get back at someone.”

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