Translation from English

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Indians Protest TV Ban- BBC

NDTV channel protests against India's Daughter ban

Screen grab from NDTV of a slate featuring India's Daughter titlesNDTV ran the slate along with comments from the public speaking out against the ban

Related Stories

India's NDTV has halted programming in protest at the banning of the BBC documentary India's Daughter. 
The network ran a slate referring to the film's title, during the hour-long slot when it should have aired.
The film, which features an interview with one of the men convicted of the Delhi bus rape, was due to be broadcast by the channel on Sunday night. 
But it was outlawed by the Indian authorities on the grounds of "objectionable content".
Explaining its decision not to broadcast an alternative show from 21:00 to 22:00 local time (15:30-16:30 GMT), editorial director Sonia Singh said in a tweet: "We won't shout, but we will be heard."
Other Twitter users praised the decision. One comment read: "Kudos @ndtv for the #IndiasDaughter protest. A surprisingly mature decision in a mediascape (sic) that seems to deteriorate buy by the day."
Another said: "@ndtv they may not always be right, but this time they are."NDTV 
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
Filmmaker Leslee Udwin, who directed India's Daughter, has rejected claims by the authorities that the documentary contained offensive remarks towards women, and could cause a public outcry.
She also denied allegations that she broke a contract with the prison by airing the interview with rapist, Mukesh Singh.
He is facing the death penalty for his part in the rape and murder of a medical student on a bus in Delhi in 2012, which sparked protests across India. 
During the film, which aired on BBC4 in Britain on Wednesday night, he showed no remorse and blamed the woman for not behaving like a "decent girl". 
The BBC's director of television, Danny Cohen defended the corporation's decision to show the film in the UK, despite a request from the Indian government that it shelve the broadcast. 
"We do not feel the film as currently edited could ever be construed as derogatory to women or an affront to their dignity," he said.
Tweet from @sonykalloor
Tweet from @sunnysingh_nw3
Tweet from @JhaSanjay

More on This Story

Related Stories

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites

More Asia stories

RSS

Features & Analysis

  • Howling wolf in snowA good walk

    The artist who makes portraits with snowshoes 

  • A hand about to smackA parent's right?

    France refuses to be taught a lesson on smacking 

  • Michael GoldfarbThe J-word

    Being hated is part of being Jewish, argues Michael Goldfarb 

  • ReadingWeekend edition

    The best reads of the past week that you may have missed 

Elsewhere on the BBC 

Programmes

  • Google's Street View (Trekker) camera on a zip wire in the Amazon rainforest ClickWatch

    Google sends a camera through the Amazon rainforest on a zip wire, plus other tech news
ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE PRESENTED BYWakey wakey!

Wakey wakey!

Learn the secrets to beating jet lag

ADS BY GOOGLE

Try our new site and tell us what you think. Learn more

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered