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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, October 20, 2018
In India, #MeToo triggers watershed moment for journalism
A #MeToo movement has taken off in India, and it has reached local newsrooms. Source: Shutterstock
AS THE rest of the world debates what has changed in the year since the
allegations against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, the revolutionary
#MeToo movement took India by surprise – just two weeks ago.
After a few isolated fits and starts, #MeTooIndia is rattling several
high-profile men and institutions in news media and entertainment.
It was sparked when Bollywood actor Tanushree Dutta aired allegations of inappropriate behaviour by her then co-star, Nana Patekar, on a film set about a decade ago.
Multiple women then accused popular stand-up comedian Utsav Chakraborty of sending them unsolicited pictures of his genitals.
It has since taken a dramatic leap forward with scores of women accusing
editors, authors, Bollywood actors and film directors of sexual
misconduct that ranges from harassment to rape.
The outpouring has offered a much-needed catharsis for many women, some
of whom mustered the courage to break their silence after two decades.

Scores of women are accusing editors, authors, Bollywood actors and film directors of sexual misconduct. Source: Shutterstock
Women journalists — who are required to report on injustices faced by
others and strive for accountability — have long endured harassment by
senior editors, colleagues and sources, keeping horrific stories about
their perpetrators to the confines of whisper networks.
The sexual harassment and abuse that earlier forced them to remain
quiet, quit, move cities or change industries is now fuelling them to
spearhead #MeTooIndia.
Allegations have led two top editors at prominent newspapers — Prashant Jha of the Hindustan Times and K R Sreenivas of The Times of India — to step down while a former Times of India executive editor resigned from a US think tank.
Seven women journalists had written to the Times Group urging action on
the allegations. The paper later released a policy on how they cover
#MeToo, stating that it will investigate complaints against their
employees in support of the movement but not of accounts posted online
anonymously.
In India, conversations on gender inequality, consent in office spaces,
and the sexual harassment of women reporters in the field are long
overdue.
Time for a frank conversation

Many female journalists in India claim to have been sexually harassed while on the job. Source: Shutterstock
Several other influential editors and journalists are being investigated
by their companies’ Internal Complaints Committee mandated under the
Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace Act, 2013.
Mainstream newspapers and start-ups alike, including those facing
allegations, are running articles on the allegations to inform readers
and sensitise them to issues related to sexual harassment — while also
embarking on some much-needed introspection as they face a major test of
credibility.
For journalists, it is critical to seize the impetus of this movement to
further the discourse of sexual harassment, from newsrooms to the
field.
Most women journalists, including me, have been groped and molested in
crowded political meetings or public spaces from which we report,
something we have unfortunately normalised as a ‘hazard of the job’.
The solution is not to send only male reporters to unsafe situations, as
some of our peers and editors have suggested. It is time for
journalists and news organisations to have a frank conversation about
women in the field and come up with policies that provide protection and
redress — while still giving them the right to pursue stories.
Watershed moment for journalism
The biggest name to be caught up in the #MeTooIndia fury is MJ Akbar, a
former newspaper editor once considered a legend in news media circles.
At least 14 women have made allegations against him of varying degrees of sexual harassment dating back to as early as 1990.
In response, he has suggested the movement has an agenda ahead of the upcoming 2019 general elections and has filed a criminal defamation suit against journalist Priya Ramani, who first named him. Mounting pressure finally led him to resign on Oct 17 from his post as junior minister in the external affairs cabinet and he has decided to fight the case personally.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has not made any statement in
response to the serious accusations against Akbar. It has also
maintained a steely silence on the #MeTooIndia movement more generally.

The Indian government has yet to issue any statement on the #MeToo allegations. Source: Shutterstock
Nevertheless, #MeTooIndia marks a watershed moment in exposing the
ubiquity of sexually predatory behaviour in the country’s media
industry.
It has opened up much-needed conversations on consent, privilege, power,
gender imbalances and everyday sexism. It has facilitated men and women
to renegotiate their interactions within and outside office spaces.
And while a few have apologised publicly for their behaviour, many men
have denied the allegations. Some of them have anointed themselves as
victims of anonymous social media outrage.
Despite finding support and strength from one another, the women who
have courageously spoken out are reliving their trauma, with many being
intimidated and facing counter-accusations of indulging in Faustian
bargains.
But India’s #MeToo movement continues undeterred and resilient, snowballing to other industries.
The modest impact it has made so far is already giving more women in
India the confidence that those who put them through horrific sexual
harassment and violence can no longer get away with it without facing
the consequences.
This article was republished from The Splice Newsroom under a Creative Commons license.



