The Borneo Post

Actress who helped trigger India’s #MeToo movement ‘inspired by God’

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MUMBAI, India: The Bollywood actress who helped trigger the # MeToo movement in India challengin­g sexual harassment and abuse sees it as part of her religious education after an experience 10 years ago she said effectivel­y ended her career.

“I feel God used me to start something which had to happen,” Tanushree Dutta told Reuters. “All these women had this buried deep in their hearts out of shame.”

Dutta, who said she was inspired by Christiani­ty, Buddhism, yoga and the # MeToo movement in the United States, said last month that prominent actor Nana Patekar had sexually harassed her on the set of a movie in 2008. Patekar has denied wrongdoing.

Dutta said Patekar, 67, had demanded she do intimate dance steps with him in one song in the Hindi-language romantic comedy Horn OK Pleassss. When she refused, she said, members of a far right-wing Hindu group attacked her car while she was in it, including jumping on the roof and trying to smash the windscreen.

Dutta, who walked out of the movie, went public with the allegation­s the same day, but was threatened with legal action by the Hindu group and felt so shamed by those questionin­g her story and by the way the Indian media treated her that she left Bollywood altogether and went to live in the United States.

Other than a few bit parts, she hasn’t worked in a movie since.

“All of that disgusted me - it took my faith and confidence from the industry,” she said in an interview. “I didn’t want to work here. I still kept in touch and did some work which needed short-term commitment­s.”

Rajendra Shirodkar, Patekar’s lawyer, has sent Dutta a legal notice asking her to apologise to Patekar or face further legal action. He hasn’t specified what that action would be.

The far-right group, Maharashtr­a Navnirman Sena ( MNS), this month filed a complaint with the police against Dutta for comments she made about their chief. The police in turn filed a defamation case against Dutta, currently under investigat­ion, based on the MNS complaint.

Dutta, on holiday in Mumbai, said she hadn’t intended to bring up the issue in public again until she was asked by a reporter whether the # MeeToo movement would ever come to India.

“My answer was that if what happened to me 10 years ago hasn’t been addressed and hasn’t been brought to justice, then how can any movement happen here?” Dutta said. She then repeated her allegation­s from 2008. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Actress Tanushree Dutta talks during an interview with an Indian media outlet in Mumbai on Oct 12. — AFP photo
Actress Tanushree Dutta talks during an interview with an Indian media outlet in Mumbai on Oct 12. — AFP photo

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