
Ahmedabad: Unhappy over the censor board's green signal to Bollywood film "Padmavati" with certain changes, a Rajput outfit today demanded a total ban on the film directed by Sanjay Leela Bhansali and threatened to "set ablaze" the cinema halls screening it.
The Rashtriya Rajput Karni Sena (RRKS) said the censor
board's nod to the controversial film was "unfortunate".
Talking to reporters here, the Gujarat president of the
outfit, Raj Shekhawat, made an open threat, saying the RRKS
members would take the law into their hands if the film was
not banned across the country.
The Ranveer Singh-Deepika Padukone-starrer has already
been banned in Gujarat and some other states.
The RRKS is a splinter group of the Rajasthan-based
Rajput Karni Sena, which is also against the release of the
film.
"It is unfortunate that the censor board has decided to
give the film a U/A certificate with only five changes. We
will not accept this.
"We want a total ban on the film, which glorifies the
barbarian invader, Alauddin Khilji. Just like Gujarat and some
other states, we want the Centre to stop its release in the
other parts of the country as well," Shekhawat said.
Stating that a few changes here and there were not
sufficient when the entire film was "distorted" and "not based
on historical facts", he said, "We want the government to
impose a pan-India ban on the film. Otherwise, we will take
the law into our hands and not hesitate to set ablaze cinema
halls (screening the film)."
According to Shekhawat, a mere change in the disclaimer
or in the title would not serve any purpose as the viewers
would eventually believe what they saw in the film.
"A panel of experts had also said that there were too
many flaws (in the film). (The erstwhile) Mewar royal family's
Maharaja Arvind Singh, who was also on the panel, had said
that facts were distorted in the film. Even then, the censor
board has taken such a decision. We will not sit quiet if the
film is released," he said.
On December 30, the Central Board of Film Certification
(CBFC), headed by Prasoon Joshi, had announced that
"Padmavati" would be given a U/A certificate and suggested
that the director changed the film's title to "Padmavat".
It had also suggested certain modifications in the
disclaimer of the film, making it clear that it did not
glorify the practice of "Sati", and relevant changes in the
song, "Ghoomar", to befit the character portrayed in it.
The CBFC had clarified that the U/A certificate would be
issued to the film once the modifications were carried out and
the final material was submitted.
The film got stuck in a controversy after various Rajput
groups alleged that it distorted history, a claim repeatedly
denied by Bhansali.
As the anti-Padmavati protests spread across various
states, the film's December 1 release was deferred as it did
not have a clearance from the censor board.
PTI