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A former colleague of journalist and politician MJ Akbar told a Delhi court on Monday, 12 November that his reputation has been "destroyed" and "damaged irreparably" due to the allegations of sexual misconduct levelled by scribe Priya Ramani.
Joyeeta Basu, the editor of Sunday Guardian, who appeared as a witness to support defamation case filed by Akbar, told Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Samar Vishal that Ramani posted all her tweets "intentionally with a purpose to harm" Akbar's "reputation and goodwill".
Akbar, who resigned as Union minister on 17 October, had filed a private criminal defamation complaint against Ramani after his name cropped up on social media when he was in Nigeria, as the #MeToo campaign raged on in India.
Ramani has accused Akbar of sexual misconduct around 20 years ago.
Basu, in her statement, said:
The journalist said that she has worked with Akbar for 20 years and had not heard anything "untoward" from the staff of the organisation where they worked together. He was a public figure who was held in high esteem, she said.
She said she considered him to be "a brilliant journalist, a scholarly writer and a thorough gentleman with an impeccable reputation."
Basu said that she was "shocked, disappointed, embarrassed" to see Ramani's tweets against Akbar and "in spite of my experience with him, his image, his reputation took a beating in my eyes on reading these tweets/articles."
The court has now posted the matter for next hearing on 7 December, when it is likely to record the statement of another witness named by Akbar in his complaint.
Akbar had earlier told the court in his statement that an "immediate damage" has been caused to him due to the "scurrilous," concocted and false allegations of sexual misconduct levelled against him.
Multiple women have come out with accounts of alleged sexual harassment by him while he was working as a journalist.
He had termed the allegations "false, fabricated and deeply distressing" and said he was taking appropriate legal action against them.