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India: Rape documentary excerpts ‘incite violence against women’

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India’s information and broadcasting ministry has told all news channels not to air a controversial documentary about rape in India — warning that the excerpts “appear to encourage and incite violence against women.”

The BBC Storyville documentary was scheduled to air Sunday, but due to the “intense level of interest” in the program, the BBC announced it would now broadcast it Wednesday evening in the UK on BBC Four “to enable viewers to see this incredibly powerful documentary at the earliest opportunity,” the broadcaster said in a statement.

The documentary features an interview with one of the men convicted in an infamous gang rape case in 2012 that sparked massive outrage and protests in India.

An Indian court restricted the publication and airing of the film in India, as well as the dissemination of excerpts from it, after Mukesh Singh’s comments were released in several media outlets. Singh appeared to show no remorse and blamed the rape victim for being out at night, according to the documentary called “India’s Daughter.”

“The media is likely to be seen as a voice for the perpetrator of such crimes by providing him a medium to communicate his views on the matter repeatedly,” stated a letter sent to media outlets by the Indian government.

Singh told the documentary crew that his victim “should just be silent and allow the rape.”

“A decent girl won’t roam around at 9 o’clock at night,” he told the BBC. “A girl is far more responsible for rape than a boy. Boy and girl are not equal.

“Housework and housekeeping is for girls, not roaming in discos and bars at night doing wrong things, wearing wrong clothes.”

Singh suggested that they “had a right to teach them a lesson.”

In a statement, India’s home minister said the documentary crew violated the conditions granting the jail interview, which stipulated that the authorities be shown all unedited footage.

Home Minister Rajnath Singh told parliament Wednesday that permission would not be granted to anyone in the future to interview prison inmates, after an uproar over the documentary.

“The government has taken necessary legal action and obtained a restraining order from the court disseminating the contents of the film,” according to the statement.

In December 2012, a young woman was savagely attacked and raped by a group of men aboard a public bus in New Delhi and later died from her injuries. Singh, who was driving the bus, is now on death row and has filed an appeal.

His comments in the documentary have stirred fierce debate about whether airing his interview gives him a platform to share his misogyny, versus those who say it increases awareness and understanding of the horror of rape.

Restricting free speech?

The director of the documentary, Leslee Udwin, wrote that she was “deeply saddened” by attempts to silence the film.

“India should be embracing this film — not blocking it with a knee-jerk hysteria without even seeing it. This was an opportunity for India to continue to show the world how much has changed since this heinous crime,” she wrote.

Several echoed the notion that even airing the repugnant views increases awareness and points to a more systematic problem. One said that it is the role of journalism to report “on the sickness,” and actress Frieda Pinto asked: “Airing the truth a crime? How?”

One journalist expressed concerns that the use of prior restraint amounted to censorship by the government and set a precedent.

Is it promoting hate speech?

The debate in social media caused hashtags #NirbhayaInsulted and #IndiasDaughter to trend in India.

Many criticized the documentary for giving rapists a platform to share their thoughts and justify rape. One asked why “rapists are treated as celebrities.”

Senior lawyer and prominent feminist Indira Jaising called the filmmaker “irresponsible.”

“Creating public space for them, encouraging tolerance of any form of violence, what the film will do, it will project justifications for rape — which I think is completely wrong. It’s going on public view where young people will be seeing it, there’s no guarantee these convicts won’t be seen as natural role models for most.”

Many questioned how Udwin was able to obtain 16 hours of interviews with the imprisoned Singh.

The home minister told the upper house of parliament Wednesday that no one would be allowed to “leverage” the 2012 gang rape incident for commercial purposes. He also said that the filmmakers violated the conditions for the shoot inside Tihar prison and that they would determine who granted permission for the interview.

Legal basis

One prominent feminist said she opposed airing the documentary because it infringed on India’s laws. Singh and three other convicts are currently appealing their death sentences.

Kavita Krishnan, secretary of the All India Progressive Women’s Association, said she didn’t have a problem with people viewing the film, but said the timing was not appropriate.

“The concern is that the airing of the documentary will result in a media trial — that will essentially leave the judiciary with no option but to uphold the death penalty,” she said.

“My main problem, how can we screen this documentary when there’s an appeals process underway?”

Krishnan suggested that the documentary’s title, “India’s Daughter,” inferred that they were badly in need of a rescue mission, leaving the impression of a “white savior” complex.

“India’s Daughter” is directed by Udwin, a British woman who spent two years on the project. She said she was inspired by the mass protests that followed the gang rape case in Delhi.

Among the voices in the debate, some were critical of what they perceived as Western bias that depicts India as a place of misogyny, when rape and sexual assaults are universal.

“I have tried to convey that while we in India are in fact engaged in confronting the violence and discrimination against women here, it does not help for people in other countries to imagine that such brutality is India’s ‘cultural’ problem; that India’s ‘backwardness’ is the problem; or that gender violence is ‘worse out there in India,'” wrote Krishnan.