Serbian celebrity Danijela Stajnfeld has accused a former culture minister and entertainer Branislav Lecic of assault, in the most recent prominent "Me Too" case to hold onto the Balkan state.
The 37-year-old entertainer, who right now lives in the US, first talked about the episode in a 2020 narrative she made about the injury brought about by sexual viciousness, however she didn't to uncover the character of the culprit at that point.
On Monday, nonetheless, she unveiled the lawmaker's name to the Serbian investigator's office in Belgrade and uncovered it freely in a video meet with the news gateway Insajder.
"I was assaulted by my associate and a dear companion Branislav Lecic, in May 2012. After four days we were in a show," the entertainer said in the meeting .
"I continued saying 'no', however long I could."
The investigator's office revealed to AFP they were examining the claims, which Lecic has denied.
The 65-year-old, one of Serbia's most conspicuous entertainers, filled in as culture serve in the mid 2000s and is currently the head of a resistance.
"It is the most grievous falsehood that ruins me," Lecic said in an explanation, adding that he was "prepared to reply to these charges out of the blue".
Insajder likewise delivered sound from a telephone discussion that Stajnfeld said she gave to investigators, in which she talks with a man, whose voice seems, by all accounts, to be Lecic's, about the supposed assault.
In the discussion, the man portrays the occurrence as his "method of communicating delicacy", adding that it was an "honor" to be needed by him.
"It's not how it goes. In the event that I say 'yes', it's a 'yes'," the man says.
Stajnfeld was one of the principal Serbian entertainers to straightforwardly talk about inappropriate behavior in the business, alongside her partner Milena Radulovic, an entertainer who blamed a dramatization educator for assault in January.
Radulovic's story started a tremendous response in the locale, with a large number of ladies taking to online media to share encounters of sexual maltreatment.
At that point, Lecic talked on the side of the people in question, which Stajnfeld says was her "tipping point".
"I understood that it's not, at this point an issue of what will befall me on the off chance that I stand up, yet a matter of my social obligation," she said.
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