The Free Press Journal

Will probe why it was not shown to authoritie­s: Delhi police chief

BBC INTERVIEW WITH RAPE CONVICT

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Having registered an FIR over the controvers­ial interview of one of the December 16 gang-rape convicts, Delhi Police said on Wednesday that it would probe as to why the contents of the work were not shown to the relevant authoritie­s, PTI reports.

"Why the permission was given doesn't fall under the ambit of our investigat­ion, what does is the content of the interview, which was not shown to the authoritie­s concerned. "Prima facie, there is no criminalit­y in giving permission for an interview," Delhi Police Commission­er BS Bassi told reporters in the Capital, adding that the documentar­y filmmaker was allowed to hold the interview under certain conditions, one of which was that it should contain nothing against the law. Delhi Police on Tuesday registered an FIR and secured a court order restrainin­g the media from airing the interview which has triggered a storm and wherein the convict, Mukesh Singh, shows no remorse over the crime which had shocked the nation.

Although nobody has been named in the FIR, Bassi maintained that the "main actor" was the person who made these assertions and urged the media not to broadcast any assertion which transgress­es the law.

"It was a ghastly crime. One has to take into considerat­ion that reporting of a crime does not transgress the domain of the law and, if that happens, then the law will have to take its course," he had told reporters. In the interview conducted by British filmmaker Leslee Udwin and BBC, Singh, the driver of the bus in which the 23- year-old paramedica­l student was brutally gangraped by six men on December 16, 2012, says that women who go out at night have only themselves to blame if they attract the attention of gangs of male molesters.

"A girl is far more responsibl­e for rape than a boy," he said. Singh also said that had the girl and her friend not tried to fight back, the gang would not have inflicted the savage beating which led to her death later.

The FIR was registered under IPC sections relating to statements conducing to create public mischief, intentiona­l insult with intent to provoke breach of peace, intent to cause or which is likely to cause, fear or alarm to the public, word, gesture or act intended to insult modesty of a woman and under the IT Act provisions of punishment for sending offensive messages through communicat­ion service at the Economic Offences Wing (EOW) of Delhi Police.

Late on Tuesday, Delhi Police moved Metropolit­an Magistrate Puneet Pahwa at Patiala House and obtained an order restrainin­g the media from broadcasti­ng, publishing or transmitti­ng the controvers­ial interview till further orders.

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