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At the court of Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Vishal Pahuja, MJ Akbar’s lawyer cross-examined Niloufer Venkatraman in the ongoing defamation hearing filed by Akbar against senior journalist Priya Ramani.
MJ Akbar was accused by several women of sexual harassment, assault, and even in one case, rape, in the wake of the #MeToo movement in October 2018. He, in turn, filed a defamation case against Priya Ramani, who had revealed in a tweet at the time that the beginning of an article she’d written the previous year was her #MeToo story about Akbar.
Niloufer Venkatraman is a friend of Ramani’s.
Senior advocate Geeta Luthra began cross-questioning Niloufer Venkatraman by asking her how often she used Twitter.
Geeta Luthra: How active are you on Twitter? When were your last two tweets before October 2018?
Niloufer Venkatraman: I am not very active, I often read but don’t tweet. I probably tweeted a year before 2018.
Luthra went on to suggest that she is a ‘tutored witness’ because of all the ‘live media coverage’ of the hearing.
Geeta Luthra: When did you read the statement by Ramani before the court in this case?
Niloufer Venkatraman: I have not read any statement by Ramani before this court. I cannot say whether there has been verbatim reporting of the proceedings taking place in the court.
She denied the suggestion put to her by Luthra that she is a ‘tutored witness’.
Luthra went on to raise objections to live tweeting the proceedings. When the Judge asked if there have been any applications against it or if the people in court are using cameras to record the proceedings, Luthra refused.
The Judge eventually dismissed Luthra’s claim and said that that people can take notes.
After completing Venkatraman’s cross-examination, Luthra went on to complete Ramani’s cross-examination. Ramani denied having any ‘mala fide or malicious intent’ in calling out MJ Akbar.
Luthra alleged that Ramani had purposely cropped the WhatsApp message that she had sent to Niloufer Venkatraman, which is now a part of the evidence. In her suggestion, she claimed that it was Ramani’s way of ‘tampering with the evidence’.
Ramani denied the suggestion and showed the original message to the court.
She further reiterated the fact that she spoke out in ‘public good’ after which her cross-examination concluded.
The matter will now be heard on 10 December.
Akbar filed a criminal defamation complaint against Ramani after she accused him of sexual harassment as the #MeToo campaign raged in India last year.
Ramani has already testified as the first defence witness in the case wherein she recalled the entire timeline of events since 1993 – right from her "uncomfortable" interview with Akbar to leaving his office and never working with him again.
Her friend Niloufer Venkatraman has testified as the second defence witness.
In the previous hearing, Venkatraman had recounted what Ramani had allegedly told her on the night of her 1993 interview with MJ Akbar.
On 23 August, Ramani had begun her statement under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to the court and said, “I defend the truth spoken in public interest and for the public good. It is only now that sexual harassment at workplace is regarded as a serious offence.”
Akbar resigned as a Union Minister on 17 October 2018.
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Published: 21 Nov 2019,10:13 PM IST