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Published 11 Oct, 2018 07:06am

Bollywood director denies #MeToo claims

MUMBAI: A prominent Bollywood director accused of sexual harassment den­ied the allegations Wednes­day as he threatened to sue two fellow film-makers for defamation over the case which has helped fuel India’s #MeToo movement.

Vikas Bahl is accused of assaulting an employee of Phantom Films ­­­— an edgy production house behind Netflix’s first original Indian series, Sacred Games — in a hotel in 2015.

In accusations published on HuffPost India on Satur­day, the unnamed woman said Bahl had insisted on escorting her to her room and pretended to pass out drunk on her bed, only to awaken and masturbate on her.

Anurag Kashyap and Vik­ramaditya Motwane, who along with Bahl and another film-maker founded Phan­tom Films, released statements on Twitter later that day backing the woman.

The report came after they had announced they were dissolving the production company on Friday.

Bahl, director of Queen, a 2014 hit movie about female empowerment, issued a denial through his lawyer on Wednesday in his first public statement responding to the allegation.

A legal notice released to the media and seen by AFP said Bahl “denies all allegations”. “Vikas Bahl issues defamation notice to Anu­rag Kashyap and Vikram­a­ditya Motwane threatening civil and criminal action,” it added.

The notice accused Kash­yap and Motwane of “professional rivalry and jealously” and of trying to jeopardise the release of Bahl’s upcoming film Super 30.

It called for them to withdraw the claims and issue an apology or face being sued.

The year-old #MeToo movement has finally gathered steam in India in recent days with Bollywood figures, a government minister, several comedians and top journalists among those accused of abusing their positions to behave improperly towards women.

The HuffPost article on Bahl appeared before a host of women journalists accused M. J Akbar, a well-known former editor and now a junior foreign minister in Narendra Modi’s government of sexual harassment.

Akbar is yet to comment publicly on the allegations and the government is yet to issue a response.

On Monday, writer and producer Vinta Nanda accused veteran film actor Alok Nath of raping her 19 years ago.

“Neither I am denying this nor do I would agree with it. It [rape] must have happened, but someone else would have done it,” Nath told an Indian news channel.

Published in Dawn, October 11th, 2018

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