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regular-article-logo Sunday, 22 December 2024

Kerala: High Court refuses anticipatory bail plea of director Ranjith, finds offence bailable

Besides being accused of sexual assault by a woman, a male actor recently alleged that Ranjith took and shared his nude photos

PTI Kochi Published 04.09.24, 04:10 PM
Ranjith

Ranjith File picture

The Kerala High Court on Wednesday closed the anticipatory bail plea moved by director Ranjith after the police said that it was considering treating the offence allegedly committed by him in 2009 as bailable.

A case under section 354 (assault or criminal force on woman with intent to outrage her modesty) of the IPC was registered against Ranjith Balakrishnan on a complaint by a female actor from West Bengal regarding an incident that occurred in 2009.

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She had alleged that the director had touched her inappropriately with sexual intent after inviting her to act in the movie Paleri Manikyam in 2009.

The prosecution told the court that the offence he was booked for was bailable in 2009 and the investigating officers were considering treating it as such, the lawyer appearing for the director said.

Recording the statement of the prosecution, the court closed the case, the lawyer said.

The 60-year-old director, the first one to be booked for a sexual offence in the days after the report was made public, had claimed in his plea that the case against him was the result of the "disappointment and resentment of the complainant at not being chosen to act in the movie being re-ignited by certain vested interests" who wanted him to be removed from the chairmanship of the Kerala Chalachitra Academy.

"In the facts and circumstances of the case, the allegations raised and especially, in the backdrop of the fact that the alleged incident had taken place 15 years back, the custodial interrogation of the applicant is not at all warranted."

"The applicant is not a flight risk and undertakes to cooperate with the investigation. It is further submitted that the court can impose sufficient conditions for the proper investigation," he had said in his plea.

Recently, a second case was registered against the director under section 377 (unnatural offence) of the IPC and section 66 E (punishment for violation of privacy) of the Information Technology (IT) Act.

The second case was on the complaint by a male actor who alleged that the director called him to a hotel in Bengaluru in 2012, asked him to strip and took his nude photos.

The complainant also claimed, before TV channels, that the photos were sent to a well known veteran female actor who denied the allegation.

Multiple FIRs have been registered against many high-profile Malayalam film personalities following allegations of sexual harassment against various directors and actors in the wake of revelations in the Justice K Hema Committee report.

The committee was constituted by the Kerala government after the 2017 actress assault case and its report revealing instances of harassment and exploitation of women in the Malayalam cinema industry.

Following the allegations of sexual harassment and exploitation cropping up against several actors and directors, the state government on August 25 announced the establishment of a seven-member special investigation team to probe them.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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