A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, February 22, 2014
Following Ban ‘Killing Fields Of Sri Lanka’ Available Free Viewing In India, Malaysia, Nepal And Sri Lanka
The controversial documentary No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka has been refused a censor certificate for release in theaters by the Indian Central Board of Film Certification. In response, Callum Macrae,
the documentary’s director has decided to make it available free online
in India. The film will also be available free in Malaysia, Nepal and
Sri Lanka, other countries where the screening of No Fire Zone has been banned.
The
producers of the controversial documentary, have accused the Indian
authorities of “political censorship of unpalatable truths” for refusing
a censor certificate on the grounds it “may strain friendly relations
with Sri Lanka.”
Claiming that “most of the visuals are of a disturbing nature,” the
Board turned down the censor certificate for the documentary.
This means that the film – which documents war crimes and crimes against
humanity committed at the end of the Sri Lanka civil war – is banned
from theatrical release in India.
The ban on the film will add to the controversy over the Indian
government’s refusal to grant a visa to the film’s director, Callum
Macrae to attend a premiere of the documentary in New Delhi and Mumbai
in November last year.
Mr Macrae – a respected film-maker who has won many industry awards and
was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his work on exposing war
crimes and crimes against humanity in Sri Lanka – said today:
“I find it very disturbing that a country whose independent history is
rooted in the struggle for democratic rights and free speech should have
taken what is, in effect, an act of overt political censorship.”
In protest against the ban – and supported by a group of journalists in
India – the production team have decided to make the film available for
free streaming online in India. It will be available from Sunday 23
February on http://nofirezone.org/watch –
both in English and in English with Hindi subtitles. The film will
also be available for free in Malaysia, Nepal and Sri Lanka.
The revelation of the Indian ban follows what appears to be a concerted
campaign by the Sri Lankan government to pressurize foreign governments
to stop the film being seen. In Malaysia a screening of the film was
raided by between 30 and 40 members of the Malaysian Censorship Board
and police officers and an organizer, Lena Hendry of Malaysian Human
Rights organisation Pusat Komas, was charged under censorship laws. She
faces a maximum of three years in jail if convicted.
That was followed by an order by the Nepalese authorities to give the
organisers of the Film Southasia Festival in Katmandu just 24 hours
notice that they must not show No Fire Zone and two other Sri Lankan films in their festival as planned.
Film Southasia issued an immediate statement: “We announce with great
regret that the Sri Lankan Government has pressurised the Nepali
authorities to stop the screening of all three documentaries” They
described the attempted ban as: “an action that goes against the freedom
of expression and the right of documentary filmmakers to exhibit their
work.”
Director Macrae said: “While telling the world that it is investigating
the allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity – the Sri
Lankan government is in practice mounting an international campaign to
deny the truth and silence the witnesses.”
“As national delegations prepare to meet in Geneva for the UN Human
Rights Council – which will hear calls for the setting up of an
international Commission of Inquiry into all the crimes committed in the
last stages of the war in Sri Lanka – we hope making the film available
in India, Malaysia, Nepal and Sri Lanka will stimulate debate on these
vital issues.”