The Borneo Post

Singapore bans hit Kashmir film over portrayal of Muslims

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SINGAPORE: Singapore has banned a controvers­ial Indian film over its “provocativ­e and one-sided portrayal” of Muslims in Kashmir that officials fear could provoke religious and ethnic tensions in the city-state.

Released in March and one of India's highest-grossing films this year, “The Kashmir Files” depicts in harrowing detail how several hundred thousand Hindus fled Muslim militants in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir in 1989 and 1990.

The movie has been endorsed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and seized on by Hindu hardliners to stir up hatred against the country's Muslim minority.

Critics say it tackles themes close to the political agenda of Modi's Hindu nationalis­t government, which has often been accused of marginalis­ing and vilifying Muslims.

The media regulator in Singapore refused to classify the film, meaning it cannot be screened.

The decision was due to the movie's “provocativ­e and onesided portrayal of Muslims and the depictions of Hindus being persecuted”, officials said in a statement.

“These representa­tions have the potential to cause enmity between different communitie­s, and disrupt social cohesion and religious harmony in our multi-racial and multi-religious society.”

The city-state's population of 5.5 million are mostly ethnic Chinese but it also has large communitie­s of ethnic Malay Muslims and ethnic Indian Hindus.

The film's director, Vivek Agnihotri, lashed out at the decision, tweeting that Singapore was the “most regressive censor in the world”.

The tightly-controlled country is sensitive to anything that could trigger ethnic and religious tensions.

It occasional­ly bans films and publicatio­ns for fear of inflaming divisions, leading some to ridicule it as a nanny state.

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