The media needs to look honestly at how it treats sexual harassment in its own offices
Ten years ago, Sunita Bordoloi (name changed), now in her mid-fifties, made a life-changing decision. She resigned from her job as a journalist at Amar Asom, a Guwahati daily, in protest against the sexual advances made by her boss, the editor. The legal harassment is still on. These days, riding the outrage over a Tehelka journalist charging its editor-in-chief Tarun Tejpal with sexual assault, Sunita is again pressing her case.
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