Akbar refutes #MeToo charges amid clamour for resignation

MJ Akbar returns to India, but keeps mum on #MeToo charges
MJ Akbar had been on an official trip abroad

New Delhi: Union Minister of State for External Affairs M J Akbar on Sunday rejected allegations of sexual misconduct levelled against him by several women as "false, fabricated and spiced up", as he questioned its timing months before the Lok Sabha polls, and vowed legal action.

Hours after returning from a trip to Africa, the junior minister issued a statement trashing the charges, saying accusations without evidence has become a "viral fever" among some sections.

"Why has this storm risen a few months before a general election? Is there an agenda? You be the judge," he said.

"The allegations of misconduct made against me are false and fabricated, spiced up by innuendo and malice. I could not reply earlier as I was on an official tour abroad," he said.

Stating that these allegations have caused irreparable damage to his reputation, the BJP Rajya Sabha MP said his lawyers would decide the next course of action after looking into the allegations against him.

"Whatever be the case, now that I have returned, my lawyers will look into these wild and baseless allegations in order to decide our future course of legal action," he said.

Terming the entire situation as distressing, Akbar said, "Lies do not have legs, but they do contain poison, which can be whipped in to a frenzy."

Over the last few days, multiple women have come out with accounts of alleged sexual harassment by Akbar when he was a journalist as the #MeToo movement swept social media, bringing to fore claims of sexual harassment by influential men in different walks of life.

The women who accused Akbar of sexual harassment include Priya Ramani, Ghazala Wahab, Shuma Raha, Anju Bharti and Shutapa Paul, among others.

Akbar sought to give a point by point rebuttal to their charges, saying while some of the accusations are totally, "unsubstantiated hearsay" others confirm, on record, that "I didn't do anything".

"It is pertinent to remember that both Ms Ramani and Ms Wahab kept working with me even after these alleged incidents; this clearly establishes that they had no apprehension and discomfort. The reason why they remained silent for decades is very apparent: as Ms Ramani has herself stated, 'he never did anything'," Akbar said.

Elaborating further, the MoS external affairs said a campaign against him was started by Ramani a year ago with a magazine article.

"She did not however name me as she knew it was an incorrect story. When asked recently why she had not named me, she replied in a tweet, never named him because he did not do anything," Akbar said.

"If I didn't do anything, where and what is the story? There is no story. This was admitted at the very inception. But a sea of innuendo, speculation and abusive diatribe has been built around something that has never happened," he said.

Similarly, Akbar said Shutapa Paul also stated that the "man never laid a hand on me" while Shuma Raha also clarified "he didn't actually 'do' anything".

He said that Anju Bharti's claim that he was partying in a swimming pool was "absurd" as "I do not know how to swim".

Among all the allegations, Akbar, in elaborate detail, countered Wahab's charges terming them false, motivated and baseless.

The minister said he worked with her only at The Asian Age newspaper, whose editorial team then worked out of a small hall and he had a very tiny cubicle.

The tables and chairs of other colleagues at the office were just two feet away from his cubicle, he said.

"It is utterly bizarre to believe that anything could have happened in that tiny space, and, moreover, that no one else in the vicinity would come to know, in the midst of a working day. These allegations are false, motivated and baseless," Akbar said.

Responding to Wahab's claim that she complained to Veenu Sandal, who wrote features for the paper, Akbar said Sandal described her (Wahab's) version as "nonsense" in an interview to an English daily and also said she never heard in 20 years anybody accusing him of any such thing.

Asserting that the women remained silent for decades because he never did anything, the editor-turned-politician said, "this is the reason why no one went to the authorities for so long, because I had done nothing".

Demands for Akbar's removal were made by some political parties, after his name cropped up on social media as part of the #MeToo movement.

While the CPI(M) and the Shiv Sena demanded Akbar's resignation, Congress president Rahul Gandhi had said the #MeToo campaign is a "very big issue". He has not commented on Akbar directly.

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