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20 Arrested In 48 Hours For Failing To Stand For Anthem In Cinemas !

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20 Arrested In 48 Hours For Failing To Stand For Anthem In Cinemas


NEW DELHI:
HIGHLIGHTS
  1. Top Court ordered audience to stand during national anthem before films
  2. 12 arrested at a Kerala film festival for failing to observe order
  3. 8 arrested at Chennai theatre after being assaulted for refusing to stand
Around 20 people have been arrested after being accused of failing to stand for the national anthem in cinemas, two weeks after the Supreme Court made it compulsory.

The Supreme Court ruled on November 30 that cinemas should play the national anthem before every screening, and that the audience should stand, drawing angry accusations of an assault on civil liberties.

12 people were arrested on Monday at an international film festival in Kerala for failing to observe the order, the police said. They said the film-goers, who have not been identified, had refused to stand after being asked to do so by organisers and police. "They were formally arrested and later released on bail," said Sparjan Kumar, police chief of the state capital of Thiruvananthapuram.

Mr Kumar said six of the 12 had been assaulted after refusing to stand, but that no charges would be brought against the attackers. "We are yet to receive a complaint over the assault. There is no investigation in (that) incident," he told news agency AFP. Mr Kumar said the 12 cinema-goers arrested in his state had been charged with various related offences, including contempt of court.

Before that, on Sunday, eight people were arrested at a cinema in Chennai after being assaulted by a group of 20 men during the interval for allegedly refusing to stand. They were reportedly charged under the Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act and face up to three years in jail if found guilty.

The Supreme Court did not specify a penalty for failure to stand, or indicate who was to take charge of monitoring rule-breaking and assigning punishment.

Before the latest order, the playing of the national anthem was only compulsory in Maharashtra.



http://www.ndtv.com/india-news/20-a...ailing-to-stand-for-anthem-in-cinemas-1637378
























NEW DELHI — The police in southern India have arrested 12 moviegoers accused of failing to stand during the playing of the national anthem, something required in all of the country’s theaters after a November ruling by India’s Supreme Court.

Police officers in the city of Chennai on Sunday arrested a man, S. Viji, on suspicion of assault and violating the Prevention of Insults to National Honor Act of 1971.

If Viji, who was released on bail, is found to have violated the act, he could face a fine and imprisonment of up to three years.

Eleven more people were arrested Monday in Thiruvananthapuram, another southern city, after being accused of sitting when the national anthem was played during screenings at a film festival. All were arrested on suspicion of disobeying a court order and released on bail, said Sarjan Kumar, the police commissioner in Thiruvananthapuram.

“We have to see whether they did it intentionally or not,” he said.

The arrests were the first known efforts by the police to enforce compliance with the Supreme Court ruling, which requires movie theaters to play the national anthem before each screening. Patrons, according to the ruling, are required to stand respectfully for the duration of the song unless they are physically unable.

The court said it was necessary that “the citizens of the country realize that they live in a nation and are duty bound to show respect to the national anthem.” The Constitution, it continued, “does not allow any different notion, or the perception of individual rights.”

The ruling on standing for the national anthem, coming in a season of swelling nationalist pride in India, was greeted with enthusiasm by some Indians and derision by others.

The arrest in Chennai followed the decision by a group of people at a theater there to resist the order, said M. Sreela, a law student who was part of the group.

“That was our first movie after the Supreme Court order,” said Sreela, who, like many in India’s south, does not use a surname. “So some of us made a choice not to stand for the national anthem when it was played. So we did not stand up. At the time, nobody objected, not even a glance from anybody.”

During the intermission, she said, another patron grabbed a man in their group by the collar and confronted him about why he had not stood for the anthem. An exchange of insults inside the theater erupted later into a parking-lot brawl.

“They were not paying respect to the national anthem, disturbing others and taking selfies,” said Vijay Kumar, who filed a police complaint against the group that refused to stand. Mr. Kumar said that in the ensuing scuffle, his nose was injured.

“If you don’t respect the national anthem, that’s your business, but at least don’t obstruct others in doing so,” he said.

The police in Chennai said they arrested one man and were seeking two more. Parties on both sides of the brawl filed police complaints against the other, alleging harassment, threats and physical abuse.

Sreela said the group had set out to defy the Supreme Court’s demand, which she described as “a force-fed and micromanaged exhibition of nationalism.”

The dictate to stand for the playing of the anthem, she said in a statement, serves to “enable self-appointed ‘guardians’ of the law and vigilantes all over the country to more aggressively pursue moral policing on their own equal fellow citizens.”

The statement compared the requirement to President-elect Donald J. Trump’s condemnation of flag-burning, and it noted that patrons at the film festival in Thiruvananthapuram “will have to stand up to the anthem even if it is 40 or more times.”




http://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/12/1...failing-to-rise-for-anthem.html?_r=0&referer=
 
Last edited:
http://www.deccanchronicle.com/nati...at-international-film-festival-of-kerala.html

Six delegates of the International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK) were booked at a screening venue for allegedly disrespecting the national anthem by not standing up while it was being played on Monday. The incident took place at Nishagandhi auditorium before the screening of Egyptian film 'Clash' when the six, including three journalists and a woman hailing from different districts in Kerala, sat on the chair. Police officers who were present there picked them after some audience brought this to their notice.

They were taken to the Museum police station where they claimed that they were not ready to leave the seats which they had struggled to get after arriving late for the show. :lol: They were booked under section 188 r/w of IPC for disobedience to the order duly promulgated by the public servant and were released on personal bonds. The Supreme Court had recently ordered that cinema halls in the country should play the national anthem before screening movies and the citizens barring people with disabilities should stand up for the anthem.

The police action came after Yuva Morcha workers complained on Monday with pictorial evidence that several delegates refused to stand up during screening of movies at another IFFK venue at Tagore theatre. State police chief Loknath Behera had ordered Cantonment Assistant Commissioner of Police, K.E. Baiju, to keep a tab on such violations using plain-clothed police officers.Meanwhile, five more IFFK delegates including a woman has surrendered claiming they had sat down while national anthem was being played at Nishagandhi as a mark of protest. They were being interrogated at the time of going to print.
 
Just out of curiosity, how does this law affect people of indian origin with another country's citizenship in an Indian theatre?
 
The day the news broke, it was 7 people, then it was 8 and now it's 12. What's next?
The figures are increasing in proportional to the need of propaganda. Keep it up.
 
I have question to Indian brothers, what if some people are too old, sugar patients or Have some problems , also having nachos, French friezes pizza on hand, how they stand.
 
i do not want to get into the SC order...

but someone atleast enlighten me please to tell....

what is the corelation between natinal anthum and movies...????

i can understand national anthim at schools....but why there is no national anthum at collages then ???
 
Hmm, do tell me how many people have been lynched in Pakistan for allegation of blasphemy, real and alleged?

Knock knock..who's there....section 295A of the Indian Penal code used as blasphemy law...
Now go search, read and educate yourself.. By the way ..can you eat beef tonight without being lynched..So plz Don't talk big.. Stay on topic
 

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