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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, March 10, 2001 |
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Opinion
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Reel trouble
A FIRM JUDICIAL directive appears to have extinguished the threat
to conduct an illegitimate, coercive and menacing protest. The
Bajrang Dal, which had expressed its intention to disrupt the
screening of the Hindi film Chori Chori Chupke Chupke, has been
forced to back down by the Delhi High Court. The Court's
directive that adequate security be provided to the Capital's
cinema halls screening the film has prompted the Bajrang Dal to
formally ``withdraw'' its decision and ``allow'' the screening of
the film. That a judicial body has prevented a nakedly
fundamentalist grouping from conducting an incendiary and
misguided campaign is worthy of welcome and a matter of great
relief. But the Bajrang Dal's capitulation before the law does
not, to underline the obvious, imply its respect for the law. If
anything, the bigots who people this organisation have made a
distressing habit of taking the law into their own hands and
committing intermittent acts of violence and brutality.
Over the last few years, cinema appears to have become a repeated
target for the Bajrang Dal and other like-minded organisations.
The Dal was involved in the violent campaign against the film
Fire. It also played a role in forcing the film's director, Ms.
Deepa Mehta, into abandoning her next project, which was titled
Water and was to be shot in Varanasi. A few months ago, Bajrang
Dal hooligans ransacked cinema halls screening Mr. M. F. Husain's
Gajagamini, ostensibly an act of retribution against the well-
known painter for the manner in which he depicted the Goddess
Saraswati on canvas many years earlier. The Dal's objection
against Chori Chori Chupke Chupke does not stem principally from
its content (as it did in both Fire and Water) or because of some
imagined slight against Hinduism committed by its Director (as
was the case with Gajagamini). Rather, it revolves around
questions over the possible links that the film's producer and
financier - Bharat Shah and Nazim Rizvi, both of who have been
arrested - have with the underworld, principally Chota Shakeel
and Dawood Ibrahim. The Dal has used this to try and lend a
grandiose moral or ideological gloss to its campaign against
Chori Chori Chupke Chupke which it has strived to defend on the
ground that no film with links to the ``underworld mafia or
Pakistani agents'' should be screened.
But the point surely is that it is not up to the Bajrang Dal to
determine how Chori Chori Chupke Chupke was financed or how
deeply the mafiosi were involved in backing it. Moreover, when a
Mumbai special court has specifically permitted the film to be
released and distributed, what right does the Bajrang Dal - or
any other organisation for that matter - have to try and forcibly
prevent its screening? Mr. Surendra Jain claims that his
organisation has always respected the Judiciary but all the
evidence points to the contrary. His own statement withdrawing
the protest against Chori Chori Chupke Chupke repeats the threat
that the Bajrang Dal will not permit films with ``underworld''
links to be screened in the future. The statement also contains
the warning that the Judiciary cannot come to the rescue of
people with such links every time. The statement reveals that
while the Bajrang Dal may have been humbled by the Delhi High
Court order, it is far from chastened. The Delhi police must take
every step possible to ensure that film lovers are able to watch
the film safely and without fear. With the Bajrang Dal's record
of duplicity and double-speak, a mere statement withdrawing the
protest is insufficient cause for letting down one's guard. It is
imperative that all the necessary protective steps are taken by
the administration to see that the screening is smooth and
trouble free.
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Section : Opinion Next : New role for the Mir | |
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