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  5. Me Too Movement: I'm not a harasser, being attacked and vilified, says Chetan Bhagat

Me Too Movement: I'm not a harasser, being attacked and vilified, says Chetan Bhagat

"Each of them suffer in their own way," he added, before mentioning that #MeToo movement "is leading to some positive change".

Edited by: India TV Entertainment Desk New Delhi Published : Oct 10, 2018 18:02 IST, Updated : Oct 10, 2018 18:02 IST
Chetan Bhagat
Image Source : TWITTER

Me Too Movement: I'm not a harasser, being attacked and vilified, says Chetan Bhagat

Bestselling author Chetan Bhagat, who has been facing a lot of flack after screenshots of his WhatsApp conversations were leaked on social media, asserted on Wednesday that he is being "attacked and vilified".

"I want you to know that I am suffering because my name is being dragged into needless controversies, and my family and I are being harassed. In the garb of the #MeToo movement, which definitely has genuine cases, I am being attacked and vilified. Let me tell you upfront -- I am not a harasser. Never was, never will be," Bhagat said in an elaborate four-page statement. 

The bestselling author, whose latest book "The Girl in Room 105" released on Tuesday, said that the screenshots in question were of "a flirtatious, but friendly and polite conversation". 

He maintained that such "baseless allegations" affect his wife, 70-year-old mother, his elderly in-laws and his twin teenaged sons. 

"Each of them suffer in their own way," he added, before mentioning that #MeToo movement "is leading to some positive change". 

"Fine, suffer a bit if it is helping overall. I stopped promoting my new book, which I have worked on every day, for years. For the first time ever, I didn't even thank my readers on the launch day, even though I am flooded with literally hundreds of messages daily across my social media congratulating me. As if I am some convict, I am supposed to shut the hell up lest the mob unleash its fury," he added. 

The celebrity writer with a Twitter following of over 12.3 million further released three brief excerpts from a story by an "erotica writer", the woman who released his screenshots. 

The three samples, Bhagat maintained, were meant "to turn you on" and were "extremely explicit, it is porn, not erotica". He said that he asked her the questions he could have asked a writer like her anywhere --at a panel at a lit fest, for instance. 

"Cut to many years later - guess what? Chetan's name is being dragged through mud, let me join the party -- and she puts out those screenshots. Her buddies high-five her, without knowing any context, and she becomes a victim too," he added. 

In an apparent reference to the screenshots released, he said that "WhatsApp allows you to delete your own chats, making it seem the other side was doing all the talking". 

Bhagat said that the #MeToo movement has its "good parts" and has some "good people with genuine grievances". 

"I am with them. However, the movement is already getting corrupted and genuine survivors will suffer if people don't take it seriously," he said. 

Bhagat further said that he is "also going to stop feeling ashamed" and is now going to start talking about his new book, which he described as "a labor of love". 

"Please don't try to ride on my fame, spoil my moment and definitely, definitely do not hurt or harass my family," he said. 

(With IANS Inputs)

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