'India: The Modi Question' was screened at the prestigious Film and Television Institute of India (FTII). (IANS)

 

BBC Documentary

India

BBC Documentary Row: Banned documentary on Modi screened at FTII

The banned BBC documentary 'India: The Modi Question' was screened at the prestigious Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), the students' association informed on Saturday.

NewsGram Desk

The banned BBC documentary 'India: The Modi Question' was screened at the prestigious Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), the students' association informed on Saturday.

The FTII Students' Association (FTIISA) said the documentary was screened on January 26, coinciding with the 74th Republic Day celebrations.

"On 26/01/23, we screened the banned BBC documentary 'India: The Modi Question' at FTII," said an FTIISA statement issued on social media on Saturday.

"Throughout history, banning of literature, music, and in recent times, media, has been a sign of a crumbling society. The act of scrutiny should be welcomed by our elected representatives. Instead, they quickly tag it as false propaganda and try to shove it under the rug. They should know that the most sure-fire way for something to be watched is to ban it," the FTIISA said in the Instagram post.

"However, the BBC documentary barely scratches the surface of the kind of violence that has been perpetuated throughout the country for a dedicated, singular, vicious purpose," the FTIISA added.

"It would be startling to us if anyone in India is surprised by the happenings in this documentary. Communal violence has become a part and parcel of the ruling party's politics," it said.

Meanwhile, it's learnt that the FTII management has initiated a probe into the screening of the documentary on the campus.

Earlier on Saturday, the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) in Mumbai had called off its planned screening of the BBC documentary, following protests by the Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha.

However, though the TISS management had warned against the screening and did not allow the use of projector, the Progressive Students Forum showed the documentary on students' mobile phones, laptops and tablets.

(SJ/IANS)

NewsGram Journalism Certification Program



NewsGram invites you to join our exclusive Certification Program designed to help you excel in Journalism and Content Creation!

What You Get:

✅ Author Profile/Byline – Your own author page on NewsGram📝
✅ Certificate – Official recognition of your expertise 🎓
✅ Live Classes – Weekend sessions + One-on-one sessions on weekdays 🎥👨‍🏫
✅ Article Publication – Publish for free under expert mentorship 📰✍️
✅ Freelancing Opportunity – Potential to work with NewsGram in the future 💼🚀


📅 Limited slots available! Take the next step in your career and gain hands-on experience in digital media content writing.


Apply right now with a mail on education@newsgram.com

For more details, see the Course Guide.

Latin American literature contains warnings for American universities that yield to Trump

Pregnant women face tough choices about medication use due to lack of safety data − here’s why medical research cuts will make it worse

Lust and Desire: The Fading Line Between What We Need and What We Want

Ukrainian Authorities Hunt Killer Of Former Parliament Speaker Parubiy

Putin In China And Four Other Things To Watch At This Year's SCO Summit