“We will get you all one day,” wrote the woman journalist, starting her write-up with “Dear Male Boss.” Yes, this is the freshest face of the #India’s MeToo movement, a campaign that’s snowballing across Bollywood and in media-spaces all over the country, putting media in a fix because media-men went astray at points in their careers. Of course, it goes without saying that women are always right and they have to be believed under all circumstances.
“Dear Male Boss” is Union Minister of State for External Affairs MJ Akbar, who was founding editor of The Telegraph and has been associated with the Times of India; Free Press Journal; and the Deccan Chronicle; he has also founded the Asian Age. MJ’s stories of sexual escapades are the stuff of folklore in the media space. They have always been there and it’s not as if “We will get you all one day” is breaking news.
But MJ is now a minister in the Narendra Modi cabinet and that places him in a unique spot. Along with the Modi government. Will PM Modi now sack him when owners of media houses never had the gumption to do so? The Congress is already calling for MJ’s resignation, forget the fact that MJ was a Congress leader before he jumped ship and joined the BJP.
Let’s not beat around the bush, #MeTooIndia is now a political weapon to settle scores and when @Priyaramani says “We will get you all one day”, she means “all” not “few” or “you”. Cornered on a staircase by a clutch of female TV journalists, EAM Sushma Swaraj and MJ’s boss, chose to be the Egyptian Mummy, which in any case she has been since the time Modi took over as PM.
At the journalist level, #MeToo has already claimed a couple of scalps. Prashant Jha, political editor of the Hindustan Times, has stepped down from his post till an office investigation is over, and KR Sreeniwas, Hyderabad resident editor, The Times of India, has been placed under administrative leave till further notice. The second guy named is a “serial offender” with seven cases of sexual misconduct attributed to him.
“Turns out you were as talented a predator as you were a writer. It was more date less interview. You offered me a drink from the minibar (I refused, you drank Vodka), we sat on (sic) a small table for two that overlooked the Queen’s necklace (how romantic!) and you sang me old Hindi songs after inquiring my musical preferences. You thought you were irresistible,” @Priyaramani wrote in her MJ expose. She also wrote, “I escaped that night you hired me. I worked for you for many months even though I swore I would never be in a room alone with you again.”
MJ Akbar has found support from fellow BJP MP Udit Raj whose contention is that women are no less predators than men and they, too, ought to be called out; men alone shouldn’t be held to the cross. Raj doubts whether the truth will ever come out. “One needs to realise the damage caused to persons facing such false accusations. This (#MeToo) is the beginning of a new trend.”
Replying to Udit Raj and his misogyny, Congress spokesperson Shobha Ozha shot back, “Will Udit Raj say the same if the woman was his relative? Be it Kathua or Unnao, BJP leaders are involved in such crimes. Here MJ Akbar does not accept his mistake but gets support from another BJP leader.”
There it is, the political fight spurred, ignited by #MeToo. Wait till MJ returns from Nigeria, there is very little in terms of corroboration to nail him except that talk such as this has been in the media milieu since the day he started interviewing aspiring women journalists in his hotel rooms. @Priyaramani, while throwing the challenge “We will get you all one day”, will have to tell the long story in court to actualise that boast. And those others she banks on should also step up to the plate.
Aditya Aamir is a freelance journalist. Views are personal.