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Akbar trying to crush truth, says Priya Ramani on defamation case

New Delhi, Oct 15
After Union Minister M.J. Akbar on Monday filed a criminal defamation suit against journalist Priya Ramani for levelling allegations of sexual harassment, Ramani said Akbar is trying to "silence" the voices "through intimidation and harassment".
Ramani is one of the many women who, in the raging #MeToo campaign, have accused Akbar of sexually harassing them in the capacity of the Editor of The Asian Age and other publications.
"I am deeply disappointed that a Union Minister should dismiss the detailed allegations of several women as a political conspiracy. By instituting a case of criminal defamation against me, Akbar has made his stand clear," Ramani said in a statement that she shared on the social media.
"Rather than engage with the serious allegations that many women have made against him, he seeks to silence them through intimidation and harassment," she added.
She insisted that she would fight allegations of defamation as "truth and absolute truth is my only defence".
She said that all the women who have spoken out against Akbar did so "at great risk" to their personal and professional lives.
"At this moment, it is disingenuous to ask why they (the victims) have spoken now, as we are well aware of the stigma and shame that sexual crimes inflict upon the victims. Rather than case aspersions on the intent and motives of these women, we must reflect on how to improve the workplace for future generations of men and women," she said.
"This is why I wish to register my strong protest against Mr. Akbar's most recent statement, which pays no heed to the trauma and fear of survivors or the courage required to speak the truth to power," Ramani said.
Akbar should step down for sake of fair probe: Journalists
Expressing "deep disappointment" at Union Minister M.J. Akbar's threat of legal action against complainants alleging sexual harassment at his hands, journalist bodies on Monday said the Minister must step down for the sake of an impartial probe into the matter.
"In the interests of a fair probe, moral and public propriety, it would only be appropriate that the Minister steps down from his post till such time as the inquiry is completed," the Press Club of India, Indian Women Press Corps, South Asian Women in Media and the Press Association said in a joint statement on Monday.
"We are disappointed that Akbar did not choose to take this step (resigning) instead of threatening the complainants with legal action," it added.
The joint statement said the need for an impartial probe into all the complaints "without fear or intimidation to the complainants" acquires particular significance if the accused was an "influential Minister" in the government.
"Akbar is a senior functionary of the government and his response should reflect the responsibility that is thus bestowed on him," it said.
The journalist organisations pointed out that sexual harassment at workplace was a "worrisome reality" and that media organisations and managements had been unable to put the systems in place to address this problem.
"Sexual harassment at the workplace is a pervasive phenomenon. It has continued with impunity despite the enactment of a tough law to prevent, prohibit and redress it. The inability of women to speak out about such harassment needs serious introspection and redress.
"We hope that employers in media organisations and the government will look into this with the seriousness it deserves and not treat the incidents as motivated complaints," the statement read.
More than half a dozen women journalists have accused Akbar, now Minister of State for External Affairs, of sexually harassing them.












