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Sexual harassment at workplace gets new definition
Monday, May 12, 2008 12:22 [IST]

New Delhi: A man can be accused of sexual harassment at workplace even in cases where the misconduct has been committed outside the office premises, the Delhi high court has said.

“If an officer indulges in an act of sexual harassment with an employee, it would not be open for him to say that he had not committed the act at the workplace but at his residence and get away with the same,” a bench headed by Justice AK Sikri said.

The court referred to the recent phenomena of senior officials of the private sector running their businesses from their residences with the advancement in information technology.

“An officer or teacher may work from the accommodations allotted to him. He would not be allowed to say that it is not a workplace,” the bench also comprising justice Vipin Sanghi said, adding “a person can interact or do business conference with other persons while sitting in some other country by means of video conferencing”.

The court passed its order on a petition filed by suspended director of National Academy of Audit and Account (NAAA) SK Mallick, facing departmental inquiry for allegedly sexually harassing his senior woman officer.

Mallick had contended that he could not be accused of sexual harassment at workplace as the alleged misconduct took place not at the workplace but at an official mess where the woman officer was residing.

The court turned down a plea of Mallick, who contended that he could not be accused of sexual harassment of an officer who was senior to him and he was not in position to extend any sort of favour to her.

“The Conduct Rules clearly stipulate that a government servant shall not indulge in any act of sexual harassment of any woman at the workplace.

The expression ‘any woman’ is broad enough to include a woman who may be senior in status as well,” the court said.

In the case, Mallick had allegedly entered the room of the woman officer at Shimla in an inebriated condition on March 30 last year and misbehaved with her.

The woman filed an FIR the next day and also intimated senior officials of the conduct of Mallick, leading to a departmental inquiry against him.

Mallick was suspended in May on the basis of a criminal case pending against him. He then approached the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) seeking to stay the departmental inquiry contending that the alleged misbehaviour did not come fall under the ambit of sexual harassment at the workplace.

He filed a petition before the high court after the CAT refused to stay the departmental proceedings.


Source : DNA

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