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Congress party workers standing on police barricades shout slogans against India's junior external affairs minister M.J. Akbar during a protest in New Delhi, on Monday. Image Credit: (AP

Mumbai, New Delhi: Indian minister M.J. Akbar filed a defamation suit against one of at least 10 women who accused him of sexual harassment on Monday, calling her allegations false and malicious.

The lawsuit names journalist Priya Ramani as the sole accused and says that she “intentionally put forward malicious, fabricated and salacious” allegations to harm his reputation.

It termed as scandalous the allegations made by Ramani against Akbar and said the “very tone and tenor” are ex-facie defamatory and they have not only damaged his goodwill and reputation in his social circle but also affected Akbar’s reputation in the community and friends, family and colleagues and caused irreparable loss and tremendous distress.

The complaint, filed through advocate Sandeep Kapur, seeks issuance of notice to Ramani under Section 499 (defamation) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

Section 500 of the IPC provides that an accused may be awarded two years jail term or fine or both in the event of conviction.

Ramani was not immediately reachable for comment.

The lawsuit comes amid widespread calls on social media for Akbar’s resignation from his post as the minister of state for external affairs.

Akbar, 67, a veteran editor who founded several publications, has been accused of a range of inappropriate behaviour by female journalists who previously worked as his subordinates.

The backlash

Many journalists have called for Akbar to be sacked and have threatened to boycott events he is attending until he resigns.

More than 200 protesters from the youth wing of the opposition Congress party waved placards and shouted slogans outside Akbar’s Delhi home on Monday. Some jumped barricades and clashed with police and dozens were detained, a Reuters witness said.

Akbar is one of the highest-profile figures so far to face accusations in India’s burgeoning #MeToo movement. Several powerful men from the worlds of media, entertainment and the arts have been snared in sexual harassment and assault allegations, which have led to a string of ousters.

In a one-page statement on Sunday, Akbar described allegations against him as “wild and baseless” and questioned if they were politically motivated.

“Why has this storm risen a few months before a general election? Is there an agenda? You be the judge,” he said in the statement.

Shutapa Paul, one of the women who has accused Akbar of sexual misconduct, told Reuters on Sunday that she was dismayed by Akbar’s response.

“Akbar’s brazen shaming of all of us is evidence of his sense of entitlement and power. I feel let down by the powers that be,” Paul said. “Truth and justice will prevail.”

— with inputs from PTI