Bangkok Post

Court to consider block on BBC exposé

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NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court will consider petitions next week against a government order blocking the sharing of clips of a BBC documentar­y that questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership during riots in 2002 in the western state of Gujarat.

The government has dismissed as a biased “propaganda piece” the film released last week, titled India: The Modi Question, and blocked the sharing of any clips from it on social media.

The Supreme Court will take up the petitions next week, Chief Justice D Y Chandrachu­d said in court yesterday.

A New Delhi-based lawyer, M L Sharma, opposed the government’s move in one of the petitions to the Supreme Court.

A separate petition by lawyer Prashant Bhushan, journalist N Ram and opposition politician Mahua Moitra focused on the order to take down social media links to the documentar­y.

In a Twitter comment on the second petition, Law Minister Kiren Rijiju said: “This is how they waste the precious time of the Honourable Supreme Court, where thousands of common citizens are waiting and seeking dates for justice.”

Mr Modi, who aims for a third term in elections next year, was chief minister of Gujarat in February 2002, when a suspected Muslim mob set fire to a train carrying Hindu pilgrims.

The incident sparked one of the worst outbreaks of religious bloodshed in independen­t India.

In reprisal attacks across the state at least 1,000 people were killed, most of them Muslim, as crowds roamed the streets for days, targeting the religious minority. But activists put the toll at more than twice that, estimating about 2,500 were slain.

Mr Modi has denied accusation­s that he did not do enough to stop the riots. He was exonerated in 2012 following an inquiry overseen by the Supreme Court and a petition questionin­g his exoneratio­n was dismissed last year.

The BBC has said the documentar­y was “rigorously researched” and involved a wide range of voices and opinions, including responses from people in Mr Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party.

 ?? REUTERS ?? India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi waves to his supporters as he arrives to cast his vote during the second and last phase of Gujarat state assembly elections in Ahmedabad, India last month.
REUTERS India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi waves to his supporters as he arrives to cast his vote during the second and last phase of Gujarat state assembly elections in Ahmedabad, India last month.

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