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How India's ban on rape film backfired

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By Justin Rowlatt BBC News, Delhi
Composite of Delhi Police hand out photos of Vinay Sharma , Pawan Gupta, Mukesh Singh, Akshay Thakur convicted for the notorious December 2012 gang rape and murder of a female student on a bus in the Indian capital, Delhi. Mukesh Singh (second from right) and his fellow rapists are appealing against their sentences
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Why did the Indian government ban the BBC rape documentary?

That's a question India's leaders must be asking themselves a week on from the ban.

If the idea was to stop people talking about the film, it has backfired in a big way.

India's Daughter has been front page news here in India every day since the ban was imposed late on Tuesday last week.

It has been trending on social media and has been the subject of characteristically vigorous debate on India's array of current affairs chat shows, with pundits jabbing angry fingers at each other into the night.

So why did the government do it?

There is certainly a political component to the ban. Permission for the interview was granted under the previous Congress-led government. The ruling BJP will have wanted to distance itself from that decision.
Misguided

It also wanted to be seen to be acting swiftly as controversy around the film blew up.

Home Minister Rajnath Singh said last Wednesday that the entire nation was "ashamed" by Mukesh Singh's words.

And the decision to ban the film was widely supported initially.

In the first couple of days after the ban even some leading Indian feminists supported it, arguing that the rapist should not be given a platform to express his repellent views.

Since then support has weakened and the consensus now, certainly in India's newspapers, seems to be that the ban is misguided.

That's because many of the arguments put forward to justify the ban have been called into question.
Film-maker Leslee Udwin speaks during a news conference in Delhi March 3 Leslee Udwin says there was no deception or breach of agreement on her part

The initial grounds for the ban were that broadcast of the film - or more precisely the interview with one of the men convicted of the savage rape and murder of a young Indian woman on a Delhi bus - could threaten public order.

The comments the rapist makes are certainly incendiary. Mukesh Singh appears to show no remorse for his crime and seems to be suggesting that, by fighting back, his victim was responsible for her own murder.

Some commentators have suggested that there is a link between elevated tensions around the issue of rape and the lynching of a rape suspect in the state of Nagaland in the north east of India.

It is a controversial claim. Vigilante justice is not uncommon in India, particularly over emotive crimes like rape.

And Nagaland notwithstanding, there hasn't been any significant disorder, despite the huge controversy around the film. Certainly nothing like the huge protest movement that grew up in the days after the original attack back in December 2012.
'Perverted views'

Another big area of debate has been whether the filmmakers got proper permission to film in Tihar, the prison where Singh is being held.

The director, Leslee Udwin, released her correspondence with the prison authorities to the media over the weekend. She says it supports her claim that there was no deception or breach of agreement on her part.

Then there was the claim that broadcasting the interview could prejudice future legal action, in particular the rapist's appeal against his death sentence in the Supreme Court.

That's been roundly rejected by the Editors Guild of India. It said that it was "an insult" to the highest court in India to suggest that airing the convict's "perverted views" would interfere with the course of justice.
Socialist Unity Centre of India activists hold placards during a protest demanding death penalty for convicted gang-rapist, in Calcutta, 4 March Some activists say the rapists should have fast-track executions

So the Indian government is now in the uncomfortable position of having to defend an increasingly unpopular ban.

A senior government minister, M Venkaiah Naidu, described the documentary as "a conspiracy to defame India".

On that basis the ban was designed to protect the good name of India in the world.

But as party chiefs survey the headlines around the globe they would be hard pressed not to conclude that banning India's Daughter has been far more damaging to India's reputation abroad than an open discussion of the issues raised by the film would ever have been.
 
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Its India, Freedom of speech...

If the film was not banned , Entire opposition would have stalled parliament. And govt wouldn't have concluded the work...

If it is banned , So called intellects are making noise..
 
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Its India, Freedom of speech...

If the film was not banned , Entire opposition would have stalled parliament. And govt wouldn't have concluded the work...

If it is banned , So called intellects are making noise..
well that doesn't justify ban...so now they may ban me or you speaking otherwise opposition would stall the parliament and will not allow work...modi must cancel foreign trips or else opposition would stall the parliament...look list could be endless and can go to most idiotic levels..no
 
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well that doesn't justify ban...so now they may ban me or you speaking otherwise opposition would stall the parliament and will not allow work...modi must cancel foreign trips or else opposition would stall the parliament...look list could be endless and can go to most idiotic levels..no


You are taking the logic to highway...

And yes ban was necessary, This is idiotic documentary. This is tarnishing Image of India.. aftermath of this Indian student was denied student VISA at Europe..

BBC should focus on Million of underage (Sikh and Brits) teenares are groomed (Raped) by local Goons.. Britain is Child Abuse capital of earth..

BBC should focus on that, rather than portraying bad image of India..
 
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banning it was a stupid move, took us down to a very low China/Pakistan/Saudi fascist level.

It's good to see the govt got egg on it's face and worldwide ridicule and condemnation.
 
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Even forgetting about the contents of the film, the film broke several laws, and undertakings given to the govt. BBC is not above Indian law. for people who havent read up on this:
Deception, Lies Behind Making of India’s Daughter -The New Indian Express
Most news channels have conveniently made this a FoE issue.

Also it's not a ban, it's temporary stay. There is a PIL happening today.
 
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More people watched the documentary because of the ban and we also got bad name in the world due to the ban. I dont know what good was served because of the ban.
I dont buy the logic that govt. took this step to avoid wastage of parliamentary time. Parliamentarians did rake up the issue in both the houses without knowing what they wanted from the govt.
 
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More people watched the documentary because of the ban and we also got bad name in the world due to the ban. I dont know what good was served because of the ban.
I dont buy the logic that govt. took this step to avoid wastage of parliamentary time. Parliamentarians did rake up the issue in both the houses without knowing what they wanted from the govt.

Banning is called what was done to "Satanic Verses" of Mr.Salman Rushdi, in India.

This is not a ban. There is lot of bad publicity spread just to create hype so that people gets attracted towards the documentary.

That's all its what we call Muscle Power of Our Fourth Pillar of Democracy i.e. "PRESS-FREE MEDIA".

Media is Exercising it's Power, ALL IN THE NAME OF FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION and fools in the society are thinking that A GOOD DOCUMENTARY IS BANNED TO HIDE SOMETHING.
 
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More people watched the documentary because of the ban and we also got bad name in the world due to the ban. I dont know what good was served because of the ban.
Good name from the world is worthless, only people who completely follow their agenda will get a good name, the moment you start to take down ngos and their mechanisms for semi control, you will become a bad person.
Besides, these countries have banned plenty of movies, when it didnt suit their agenda.

List of films banned in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
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Even forgetting about the contents of the film, the film broke several laws, and undertakings given to the govt. BBC is not above Indian law. for people who havent read up on this:
Deception, Lies Behind Making of India’s Daughter -The New Indian Express
Most news channels have conveniently made this a FoE issue.

Also it's not a ban, it's temporary stay. There is a PIL happening today.
The fact is our govt. failed to protect India from malicious propaganda. The producer was doing her best for the commercial success of her documentary and our govt. appeared to be in a panick. If it was simply a stay on the screening due to technical grounds, the govt. made it look like a ban and the message to the world was that Indians rape and if you try talking about it you are banned. Utter failure of Indian govt.s PR and media managers.

Good name from the world is worthless, only people who completely follow their agenda will get a good name, the moment you start to take down ngos and their mechanisms for semi control, you will become a bad person.
Besides, these countries have banned plenty of movies, when it didnt suit their agenda.

List of films banned in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What is the point giving the list of films banned in UK when the damage to India's reputation is done. The rape rates are highest in Sweden, South Africa,US, UK etc. but India gets the bad name because people here protest.
 
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The people came to know about the documentary only because it was banned.

Otherwise there is no demand for BBC documentaries in India and not much people watches it.

But more awareness about rape issue is created by this media mess jobs which is good in long term.
 
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The fact is our govt. failed to protect India from malicious propaganda. The producer was doing her best for the commercial success of her documentary and our govt. appeared to be in a panick. If it was simply a stay on the screening due to technical grounds, the govt. made it look like a ban and the message to the world was that Indians rape and if you try talking about it you are banned. Utter failure of Indian govt.s PR and media managers.
I agree with this, the problem is these are time bombs left by the previous govt, and that the key instrument of democracy the media is heavily anti govt.

In the first case, the shooting shouldve never been allowed, some how these people got in. The big, big problem in India is that the media is completely sold out, or loves sensation, without thought. The completely a sense of lack self censorship aswell.

When you have press/parties that even question the govt constantly on even anti terror ops, this is nothing.

What is the point giving the list of films banned in UK when the damage to India's reputation is done. The rape rates are highest in Sweden, South Africa,US, UK etc. but India gets the bad name because people here protest.

I'm trying to point out is that these people are hypocrites. Is your objective is to earn praise, from the west, or enfoce the laws of your land? BBC running away after breaking regulations and then black mailing the govt on reputation is just plain stupid, either live up to your commitments. They will continue to do propaganda. The only way to deal with this is to give them middle finger and move on.

This should be treated along the same lines as Obamas lecture on "religious tolerance".
 
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