Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh today said the British Broadcasting Corporation or BBC should not have telecast ‘India’s Daughter’, the documentary based on the December 2012 Delhi gang-rape, and that action will be taken accordingly.
“We had asked to not release the documentary, but BBC still released it, and we will investigate and the MHA will take action accordingly… The conditions have been breached so action will be taken accordingly. I won’t comment any further on it,” the home minister said.
The documentary by British filmmaker Leslee Udwin was telecast by the BBC in the UK and other countries on Wednesday night.
Earlier today the BBC said that it has no plans to telecast the documentary in India. In a communication to the Home Ministry, the BBC said that in compliance with the Government of India’s directive, it would not telecast the documentary in India, official sources said.
Mr Singh had said earlier on Wednesday that the government, which has procured a court order banning the screening of the film in India, would try and prevent its telecast in other countries too.
Mr Singh also made a statement in Parliament amid massive uproar over how permission was granted to the film-maker to interview Mukesh Singh, one of the six men who brutally raped and tortured a 23-year-old paramedical student on a moving bus on December 16, 2012. She had died 13 days later.
In the interview, Singh, one of four men on death row in the case, has displayed an appalling lack of remorse, blaming the woman for the rape.
The BBC said in its statement, “This harrowing documentary, made with the full support and co-operation of the victim’s parents, provides a revealing insight into a horrific crime that sent shock waves around the world and led to protests across India demanding changes in attitudes towards women.”
“The film handles the issue responsibly and we are confident the programme fully complies with our editorial guidelines,” it said.