Priya Ramani case: After two years of hearings, Delhi court says it has no jurisdiction
Ramani and around 20 more women have accused former Union minister MJ Akbar of sexual misconduct over several years during his journalistic career.
The Delhi court hearing author-turned-politician MJ Akbar’s defamation case against journalist Priya Ramani for the past two years said on Tuesday that it does not have the jurisdiction to continue with it, Bar and Bench reported. Ramani had accused Akbar of sexual harassment in October 2018, following which he sued her.
Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Vishal Pahuja on Tuesday told both parties that as per a circular from February 2018, the court can only hear cases filed against MPs or MLAs, and not by them, PTI reported. Akbar remains a Rajya Sabha MP of the Bharatiya Janata Party though he had quit as Union minister after a horde of allegations against him surfaced during the #MeToo movement. “As per the Supreme Court’s directions [from November 2017], only matters filed against MPs and MLAs can be listed before the Rouse Avenue court,” Pahuja said.
Most of the hearings in the case have already taken place, including the final arguments. On Tuesday, the court was expected to hear a rebuttal from Akbar’s lawyer to Ramani’s final arguments, made last month.
The judge listed the matter for hearing before the district and sessions judge of the Rouse Avenue court on Wednesday at 10.30 am. The judge, Sujata Kohli, will pass an order on whether the case will continue before Pahuja.
The case
Ramani had first made the allegations about an incident of sexual harassment by an acclaimed newspaper editor in an article in Vogue India in 2017. She identified Akbar as that editor in October 2018 during the #MeToo movement, in a series of tweets. Soon after this, around 20 more women accused Akbar of sexual misconduct over several years during his journalistic career.
The Patiala House Court had on January 2019 issued summons to Ramani in the defamation case. In February 2019, she was granted bail on a personal bond of Rs 10,000. In May 2019, Akbar had denied meeting Ramani in a hotel room where she alleged he had sexually harassed her. He denied all information about the meeting that Ramani had narrated.
Ramani told the court in Delhi on September 19 that she deserved to be acquitted, because she shared her experience in good faith and encouraged other women to speak out against sexual harassment. Ramani’s lawyer Rebecca John, while submitting her final arguments in the case, said that Ramani had proved her allegations against Akbar with solid evidence, which were also confirmed by multiple women.
Ramani’s lawyer also responded to Akbar’s accusation that her tweets had tarnished the reputation he built through his work. “Hard work is not exclusive to MJ Akbar,” she quoted Ramani as saying. “This case is not about how hard he worked.. My case is that before I met him, I admired him as a journalist. But his conduct with me and the shared experience of other women do not justify this complaint.”
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