She should have been arrested for breaking countless Indian Laws in the first place.She isn't above the laws of this country just because of her profession.What she did was a total insult to our Judiciary and an indirect insult to our Constitution.My personal opinion is that the GoI should prosecute her for falsifying evidences and breaking a number of Indian laws in the process and should start a process of extraditing her from the U.K.
There is nothing insulting in the documentary about our constitution. There was no false evidence in it, unless you can prove that she paid the rapist to say those words. Btw you should know that if you want an interview of Bill Clinton, for example, you have to pay him. The rapist does not seem to be coerced or trained to say those words at all. Just watch bits of the documentary where he says its the girl's fault.
There is a huge difference between restraining order and a ban. Does Indian laws and judicial process is to be messed around like they are nothing?
Ohh please. Restraining order on a film is a ban.
The film maker claimed that she got the permission for the interview, which seems to be true from other independent reports. The interview does not violate the judicial process per se. If you have belief in our judges, with faith in their not getting affected by public knowledge like the documentary, that is. It would have violated the judicial process in countries where a jury decides whether a guy is guilty or not.
The only technicality on which the ban was imposed is that the documentary is supposed to be for educational/informational purposes and that somehow airing it on BBC violates this undertaking. I don't see any such clauses in the permission letter the film maker put out. It says interview is permitted if she got a written permission from the people in jail to be interviewed.
The second technicality which the government did not even bother with, which would have made some sense, is that the name of the victim was revealed in the documentary. Btw an Indian media agency already did this mistake once earlier. I don't see them in jail.
There is no falsifying of evidence. She reported whatever she recorded from the people around the incident, in good faith. For some reason, she missed interviewing Nirbhaya's friend. And this did not change the story a lot, except which movie the guy wanted to watch.
And just notice what the minister is claiming the documentary to be. If there were really nationalist and worried that it would defame India, they shouldn't have provided free publicity to it with a ban. It is not like they can ban every documentary about India in other countries. We cannot afford to have people who are both ultra-nationalist and stupid.