Headlines
US journalist alleges rape by Akbar, he says it was consensual

New Delhi, Nov 2
Journalist-turned-politician M.J. Akbar, who quit as Union Minister after charges of sexual harassment by many journalists, has now been accused of rape by US journalist Pallavi Gogoi. Akbar said they had a "consensual relationship" even as his wife accused Gogoi of lying.
In a first person account in The Washington Post published on Friday, Gogoi, now the Chief Business Editor at National Public Radio, gave a detailed account of how she was allegedly raped by Akbar and narrated her ordeal of working under him when he was the Editor of The Asian Age years ago.
After two incidents in Delhi and Mumbai where Akbar "molested and sexually assaulted her", Gogoi, now a US citizen, narrated how she was raped in a hotel in Jaipur.
"In his hotel room, even though I fought him (Akbar), he was physically more powerful. He ripped off my clothes and raped me. Instead of reporting him to the police, I was filled with shame," wrote Gogoi.
She said after the Jaipur incident, "his grip over me got tighter".
"For a few months, he continued to defile me sexually, verbally, emotionally.
With over a dozen journalists accusing him of sexual harassment and assault, Akbar quit as Minister of State for External Affairs on October 17. Denying the charges, he filed a criminal defamation case against journalist Priya Ramani who was the first to accuse him.
Gogoi also attacked the BJP for letting Akbar continue as its member.
Later, when Gogoi was posted in London, she felt the abuse would stop because she would be far away from Delhi. But "the truth was that he was sending me away so I could have no defenses and he could prey on me whenever he visited the city where I would be posted".
She said she did not bring up Akbar in conversations as "I've always felt that Akbar is above the law and justice doesn't apply to him.
"But I am writing this because I know what it is like to be victimized by powerful men like Akbar. I am writing this to support the many women who have come out to tell their truth," she added.
Both Akbar and his wife Mallika trashed Gogoi's allegations.
Akbar claimed his relationship with Gogoi was "consensual".
"Somewhere around 1994, Gogoi and I entered into consensual relationship that spanned several months. This relationship gave rise to talk and would later cause strife in my home life as well. This consensual relationship ended, perhaps not on best note," he said in a statement.
He said that "at no stage did the behaviour of Pallavi Gogoi give any one of them impression that she was working under duress".
Coming out in his defence, Mallika, who has been silent so far on the charges against her husband, said: "More than 20 years ago, Gogoi caused unhappiness and discord in our home. I learned of her and my husband's involvement through her late night phone calls and her public display of affection in my presence. In her flaunting the relationship, she caused anguish and hurt to my entire family.
"At an Asian Age party at our home, crowded with young journalists, I have watched with mortification and pain as they danced close. I had confronted my husband at the time and he decided to prioritize his family."
She said Gogoi would "happily drink and dine at our home with us and did not carry the haunted look of victim of sexual assault... I don't know Pallavi's reasons for telling this lie but a lie it is."
Meanwhile, The Editors Guild said it was writing to Akbar and would wait for his response before deciding on his membership.
In a first person account in The Washington Post published on Friday, Gogoi, now the Chief Business Editor at National Public Radio, gave a detailed account of how she was allegedly raped by Akbar and narrated her ordeal of working under him when he was the Editor of The Asian Age years ago.
After two incidents in Delhi and Mumbai where Akbar "molested and sexually assaulted her", Gogoi, now a US citizen, narrated how she was raped in a hotel in Jaipur.
"In his hotel room, even though I fought him (Akbar), he was physically more powerful. He ripped off my clothes and raped me. Instead of reporting him to the police, I was filled with shame," wrote Gogoi.
She said after the Jaipur incident, "his grip over me got tighter".
"For a few months, he continued to defile me sexually, verbally, emotionally.
With over a dozen journalists accusing him of sexual harassment and assault, Akbar quit as Minister of State for External Affairs on October 17. Denying the charges, he filed a criminal defamation case against journalist Priya Ramani who was the first to accuse him.
Gogoi also attacked the BJP for letting Akbar continue as its member.
Later, when Gogoi was posted in London, she felt the abuse would stop because she would be far away from Delhi. But "the truth was that he was sending me away so I could have no defenses and he could prey on me whenever he visited the city where I would be posted".
She said she did not bring up Akbar in conversations as "I've always felt that Akbar is above the law and justice doesn't apply to him.
"But I am writing this because I know what it is like to be victimized by powerful men like Akbar. I am writing this to support the many women who have come out to tell their truth," she added.
Both Akbar and his wife Mallika trashed Gogoi's allegations.
Akbar claimed his relationship with Gogoi was "consensual".
"Somewhere around 1994, Gogoi and I entered into consensual relationship that spanned several months. This relationship gave rise to talk and would later cause strife in my home life as well. This consensual relationship ended, perhaps not on best note," he said in a statement.
He said that "at no stage did the behaviour of Pallavi Gogoi give any one of them impression that she was working under duress".
Coming out in his defence, Mallika, who has been silent so far on the charges against her husband, said: "More than 20 years ago, Gogoi caused unhappiness and discord in our home. I learned of her and my husband's involvement through her late night phone calls and her public display of affection in my presence. In her flaunting the relationship, she caused anguish and hurt to my entire family.
"At an Asian Age party at our home, crowded with young journalists, I have watched with mortification and pain as they danced close. I had confronted my husband at the time and he decided to prioritize his family."
She said Gogoi would "happily drink and dine at our home with us and did not carry the haunted look of victim of sexual assault... I don't know Pallavi's reasons for telling this lie but a lie it is."
Meanwhile, The Editors Guild said it was writing to Akbar and would wait for his response before deciding on his membership.
Pallavi Gogoi, Chief Business Editor at National Public Radio, in an article written under her byline for The Washington Post published on Friday (Thursday, India time), narrated her detailed account and described the incident of rape and various others incidents of sexual assault on her 23 years ago as "the most painful memories of my life".
Akbar's lawyer, Sandeep Kapur, told the Washington Post that his client "states these (incidents and allegation) are false and expressly denied." When contacted by IANS, Kapur said the same thing adding that "any further course of action would be decided by the evening."
After two incidents in Delhi and Bombay where Akbar had sexually molested and assaulted her, she said, one news story took her to a remote village a few hundred miles from Delhi.
"The assignment was to end in Jaipur. When I checked back, Akbar said I could come discuss the story in his hotel in Jaipur, far from Delhi."
"In his hotel room, even though I fought him, he was physically more powerful. He ripped off my clothes and raped me. Instead of reporting him to the police, I was filled with shame," said Gogoi.
"I didn't tell anyone about this then. Would anyone have believed me? I blamed myself. Why did I go to the hotel room?" she added.
She said after the Jaipur incident, "his grip over me got tighter".
"I stopped fighting his advances because I felt so helpless. He continued to coerce me. For a few months, he continued to defile me sexually, verbally, emotionally," she added.
After several women journalists charged Akbar with sexual harassment and assault in the past one month, he resigned as Minister of State for External Affairs on October 17. He has filed a defamation case against one of the first accusers.
In her 1,800 word article, Gogoi attacked the ruling BJP for letting Akbar continue as its member.
"He's still today a member of the Indian Parliament and a member of the ruling party, which prides itself on advancing rights for young girls," she wrote.
Gogoi added that he would burst into loud rages in the newsroom if he saw her talking to male colleagues of her age. "It was frightening."
Later, when Gogoi was posted in London, she felt that the abuse would stop because she would be far away from Delhi office "except the truth was that he was sending me away so I could have no defenses and he could prey on me whenever he visited the city where I would be posted."
She also alleged that Akbar was hit her when he saw her speaking to a male colleague in London office and "went on a rampage, throwing things from the desk at me -- a pair of scissors, a paperweight, whatever he could get his hands on", she said.
"I was in shreds -- emotionally, physically, mentally..." she wrote
She said it was difficult to explain why she didn't fight him back then.
"I cannot explain today how and why he had such power over me, why I succumbed. Was it because he was so much more powerful than I was?..."
She said over the years, she did not bring up Akbar in conversations as "I've always felt that Akbar is above the law and justice doesn't apply to him. I felt he would never pay the price for what he had done to me."
"But I am writing this because I know what it is like to be victimized by powerful men like Akbar. I am writing this to support the many women who have come out to tell their truth."

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