advertisement
Just two days after veteran journalist Vinod Dua was accused of sexual harassment and stalking by filmmaker Nishtha Jain, he went on his show Jan Gan Man ki Baat on The Wire to mock the #MeToo movement.
Notably, Dua was under Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) investigation instituted by The Wire to look into the allegations against him, when the 318th episode was published on Tuesday, 16 October.
While the title of the episode is ‘Rafale Deal and Rising Fuel Prices’, Dua sets the platform for his own defence.
In the video episode, Dua claimed that the movement against sexual harassment has shifted focus from “significant issues” to reportage of “people being accused of sexual harassment and those being named in this movement.”
An under-investigation Dua, took to the platform to dismiss the allegations against him, and dubbed them as “muck.”
“Kayde se sawaal ye pooche jaane chahiye iss waqt lekin media sab sawaalon ko bhula kar ek hi vishay pe kayam hai (These are the questions that should be asked at this point of time but the media has forgotten all questions and is focusing only on one issue),” Dua alleged in his episode.
Reacting to the journalist’s video, Jain questioned The Wire for providing him a platform to defend himself, when it is an ongoing investigation.
In the statement published on Facebook, Jain also asked how an accused can be a judge in his own case.
In the episode, he asks, “What can a person who has been named do, but deny that he has committed the said act.” He also announced that he is suspending his show for a week as he is publicly answerable to The Wire and his audience.
On 14 October, Jain had accused Dua of “slobbering all over her face” in his car in her office’s parking area in 1989. She also alleged that Dua stalked her in the following days.
The Wire’s ICC took note of Jain’s allegations on 15 October. The organisation said in an official note that an external committee has been instituted to investigate Jain’s complaint. They said in a statement that no official complaint has been filed by the accuser yet.
People on Twitter questioned not only The Wire’s decision to provide a platform for Dua, and also “insisting” Nishtha to file a formal complaint.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)