BBC to air Nirbhaya documentary 'India's Daughter' on Wednesday night in UK
BBC to air Nirbhaya documentary 'India's Daughter' on Wednesday night in UK
The controversial Nirbhaya documentary based on the 2012 Delhi gangrape is scheduled to be aired on BBC in United Kingdom on Wednesday night.

New Delhi: The controversial Nirbhaya documentary based on the 2012 Delhi gangrape is scheduled to be aired on British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in United Kingdom (UK) on Thursday night.

This comes despite Rajnath Singh's attempts to stall the broadcasting of the documentary internationally as well which features an interview of Mukesh Singh who is one of the convicts in the 2012 Delhi gangrape-murder case.

Home Minister Rajnath Singh had on Wednesday asked BBC, the Ministry of External Affairs and the Information and Broadcasting Ministry to ensure that the documentary is not broadcast anywhere in the world. A Delhi court has restrained broadcast of the documentary in India until further orders in which Singh is blaming girls for rape.

Singh also summoned Delhi Police Commissioner BS Bassi, Tihar Jail DC Alok Kumar Verma to get a better insight into the matter. He convened a meeting of top officials including Delhi Lieutenant Governor Dr Najeeb Jung and police on the December 16 gangrape-cum-murder documentary shoot.

The Home Ministry is planning legal action against British filmmaker Leslee Udwin for interviewing Singh within the premises of Tihar Jail and for allegedly violating stipulated conditions in the permit that was granted to her.

Leslee, however, claimed that she had the required permission to shoot the interview from Home Ministry and Tihar Jail authorities.

The letter giving consent for the interview is dated July 24, 2013, when the UPA was in power and Sushil Kumar Shinde was the home minister. The letter said the ministry has no objection to the interview provided that written consent is obtained from each of the convicts interviewed.

Then joint secretary of the Home Ministry wrote to the then Director General of Prisons Vimla Mehra, granting permission to Leslee Udwin to interview some convicts.

Earlier in the day, Singh had clarified in Parliament that terms and conditions for the shooting were violated. He said that a restraining order had been obtained against the screening, but opposition members questioned the move.

He said, "The condition was given to shoot the interview for social purpose and not for commercial use. A legal notice was issued to them when the jail authorities came to know that it violated the conditions. The permission to shoot the documentary was given with conditions."

He assured the House that the government will not allow the telecast of the documentary. He said, "The government condemns December 16 incident. We will not allow any group or individual to use the incident for any commercial use. The government is committed to dignity and security of women."

Minister of State for I&B Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore said, "The airing of documentary would be contempt of court. This entire documentary is against the programming code of I&B ministry. Language seems to incite violence against women, and instils fear."

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