[The film, btw, though no longer available on youtube sites, is still
available on some other sites.
So, the ban has proved to be simply counterproductive.

"The director called the allegations against her in the Indian media a
"smear campaign." She denies having paid for interviews, of cutting a
deal with Mukesh Singh (the rape accused in Tihar Jail), and of not
having followed legal processes in filming the story. According to
her, she showed the uncut raw footage -- all 16 hours of it -- to a
specially constituted five-person review team in Tihar on December 9
and 10, 2013. She also got separate permissions from the Home Ministry
and the police for conducting interviews with the police and doctors.
Several leading lawyers told her that the documentary would not
prejudice the case. Finally, she says that the movie was seen and
endorsed by the State prosecution team."

***One does not have to vouchsafe for the correctness of the version
cited above in order to acknowledge that these "allegations" have
little to do with the merits, or demerits, of the film itself.***

Reproduced below at sl. no. ii is the text of the full interview of
Leslee Udwin with Parvathi Menon of The Hindu.]

I/II.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/leslee-udwin-wanted-world-to-follow-indias-lead/article6972079.ece?ref=sliderNews

Updated: March 9, 2015 08:55 IST
EXCLUSIVE
Leslee Udwin: Wanted world to follow India's lead
PARVATHI MENON

 British director Leslee Udwin denies having paid for
interviews and striking a deal with convict Mukesh Singh
for her documentary India's Daughter, which has been
banned in India.
Reuters British director Leslee Udwin denies having paid for
interviews and striking a deal with convict Mukesh Singh for her
documentary India's Daughter, which has been banned in India.

Calls allegations against her in the Indian media a "smear campaign"

"The Indian government is inviting the world to point fingers at
India, and call it undemocratic and unconstitutional," said Leslee
Udwin of the ban on the documentary India's Daughter, which has
resulted in the film going viral on YouTube.

"Why are they doing this? Why are they intent on committing
international suicide?" asked the award-winning British producer who
directed the documentary that has been at the centre of a storm in
India. "All I want to say to the world through my film and campaign is
this: India led by example, now follow India's lead."

The film and accompanying campaign will see its official launch on
Monday in New York. Among those who will attend and support the launch
are actors Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway and U.N.
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief
Coordinator, Baroness Amos.

***An unfortunate outcome of the BBC version of the film going viral
is that it does not carry the global statistics on rape that the
Indian and international versions have. "The tragedy for me is that
the pirated copy on YouTube does not have the global statistics, as
BBC Storyville has a house style that doesn't allow them to put
statistics on a film," Ms. Udwin said.*** [Emphasis added.]

***The director called the allegations against her in the Indian media
a "smear campaign." She denies having paid for interviews, of cutting
a deal with Mukesh Singh (the rape accused in Tihar Jail), and of not
having followed legal processes in filming the story. According to
her, she showed the uncut raw footage -- all 16 hours of it -- to a
specially constituted five-person review team in Tihar on December 9
and 10, 2013. She also got separate permissions from the Home Ministry
and the police for conducting interviews with the police and doctors.
Several leading lawyers told her that the documentary would not
prejudice the case. Finally, she says that the movie was seen and
endorsed by the State prosecution team.*** [Emphasis added.]

II.
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/interview/i-am-not-a-flybynight-operator-leslee-udwin/article6972008.ece?homepage=true&ref=relatedNews

Updated: March 9, 2015 03:38 IST
'I am not a fly-by-night operator'

"We never did any secret filming. As a world-renowned producer who has
won a British Oscar, I would never do a thing like that."

***I can tell you hand-on-heart that we have not paid one rupee to
anyone we interviewed***

Leslee Udwin, Director of the controversially banned documentary
India's Daughter, was back in London for a few days before leaving for
New York, where her film will be formally released on March 9. Her
voice hoarse with fatigue, Ms. Udwin responded to the issues the film
has raised. Excerpts from an interview with Parvathi Menon.

*Your film has been banned in India for an interview with an accused
rapist, and for "showing India in a bad light". How do you respond to
that?*

The ban is utterly beyond my comprehension because what this film says
is like a mirror held up to what Prime Minister Modi has said in all
his statements about gender equality since he came to power. He has
spoken about resetting the moral compass in India, about supporting
women attain equality, and finding ways to educate women, has total
synergy with the film. We are saying the same thing.

He must have these moral values, otherwise he would not be saying
these things. How does that square with India bowing out of showing
the film as it is?

All I wanted was to say to the world is that India led by example, now
follow India's lead. This was the point of my film and campaign.

*You had appealed directly to Mr. Modi to repeal the ban. Did you hear
from him?*

We haven't heard from Mr. Modi yet. The government is inviting the
world to point fingers at India, and call it undemocratic and
unconstitutional. Why are they doing this? Why are they intent on
committing international suicide? All I want to say to the world
through my film and campaign is this: India led by example, now follow
India's lead.

This film can still be shown if they change their mind by tomorrow
night [International Women's Day]. India will then be holding its head
high to move forward with an agenda to put women in the spotlight of
getting equality - which is unfinished business the world over.

If they do not lift this ban, it will be said that on Women's
International Day, there were to be seven countries holding hands for
global equality, and India has bowed out.

The India's Daughter campaign, which the film was designed to unleash
worldwide, will be launched globally on March 9. Every country in the
world will take this film forward with the message "Our women are in
trouble in every country."

*Why focus on India when gender discrimination and rape is a global issue?*

It was not the horrific rape that made me come to India. The
extraordinary, courageous and unprecedented protests that followed
made me think: "My God, they are fighting for my rights in India." I
was so grateful. I have myself been raped. It is not surprising -- one
in five women globally have been raped. So I am one of the 20 per
cent.

***The supreme irony is that my film has got statistics at the end of
it of offences against women in every country in the world. By their
ban, the government forced the BBC version, and not the India version,
to be leaked onto YouTube. If you ban something, the first thing you
do is to make every person in the world see a pirated version. And
that is what has happened. The tragedy for me is that the pirated copy
that went up on YouTube does not have the global statistics, and for a
reason that is mundane and ridiculous. The BBC Storyville has a house
style that doesn't allow them to put statistics on a film. It upsets
and angers me that people in India would have seen the film without
those statistics.*** [Emphasis added.]

***There are three version of the film. In the BBC version, the
credits are shorter and there are no statistics. The international
version is the full version with all the credits and the statistics.
It also names the rape victim, as her name is all over the
international media, and even in Wikipedia. The third is the Indian
version in which the victim has not been names. That is the law in
India, which we all respect. The parents wanted her name out of the
Indian version but agreed that it be carried in the international
version.*** [Emphasis added.]

***So now the YouTube version has got so many heads that I am trying
every day to cut them down with a sword. My team has pulled down the
online version thousands of times because I want to obey that ban, as
it is India's law. But unfortunately it has now got into Torrent.***
[Emphasis added.]

*How do you respond to the allegation that you did not follow due
legal processes?*

I am a producer of 20 years standing who does her due diligence. I am
not a fly-by-night operator.

***I followed the legal due process in every respect. I complied with
the permissions: they are cast iron, which is why I have actually
released the copies of the permissions so people can have a look and
see what it says. It does not give editorial control to the Ministry
of Home Affairs or to the prison. It allows them only to reflect and
approve of potential breeches of prison security. A five-person
committee from Tihar was constituted to look at the raw, unedited
footage we shot in Tihar, every single frame. On December 9 and 10,
they saw every frame of the 16-hour footage.*** [Emphasis added.]

There was one and only one comment they made. There was a moment when
Vinay Sharma, one of the accused, was looking to the camera and said
something to the cameraman. The committee said that piece should not
be in the film because he hasn't signed the consent form to be
interviewed. And I said fine. On nothing else did they made a comment.

***So I got permission to film the doctors, I got permission from the
police (through their Delhi PRO Rajan Bhagat), I got permission from
the Ministry of Home Affairs and Tihar jail; and consent from Mukesh
Singh to shoot that interview.*** [Emphasis added.]

***On the issue of the interview being sub-judice, it is not so and I
will tell you why. I sought the opinion of at least five senior High
Court and Supreme Court lawyers, who each told me verbally that the
film would not prejudice the hearings. I then went to the trouble and
expense of commissioned a legal opinion from two senior and well-known
ex-Supreme Court judges. I had no idea what they would say when I went
to them. I will not mention their names because an opinion sought by a
client has a sort of legal privilege. They too said there is nothing
in the documentary that could prejudice the Supreme Court case.***
[Emphasis added.]

Not only that. I also took the risk of showing the film to the state
prosecution team, to be absolutely sure, because if even one piece of
evidence in the film could prejudice the case, I could never live with
myself for the rest of my life. The team said the documentary is one
hundred percent accurate to the case. "We are amazed by how balanced
it is," they said. They asked me to put a disclaimer at the beginning
of the film, and said they had no reason whatsoever that the film not
be shown while the appeal is going on. I have a disclaimer on every
version.

*Did you feel threatened by the government?*

***I had a screening of the film for senior editors in Delhi on
Tuesday, March 3. A journalist came running up to me and showed me on
her mobile news that an FIR had been issued against me. It was around
6 pm and the first thing I did was to call around seven lawyers whom I
knew in Delhi. I was due to leave on Wednesday, the following night.
Every one of them told me to leave on the next plane to England. They
all said that my passport would be taken away, and I would not be able
to get back. I took this very seriously. And then decided to sit it
out. If I left early, they will think I fled, that I was in the wrong
and had something to hide. I wanted to be able to proudly hold up the
ticket of the flight I took and show them it was booked three weeks
before any of this started. Despite that there has been a total smear
campaign to say I fled.*** [Emphasis added.]

*What about the allegation that you made the film for commercial gain,
that you paid Mukesh Singh for the interview, and that he did not know
he was being filmed?*

I will not allow them to besmirch my name and say that I made it for
commercial gain. I came using my own money out of which I paid my
crew. In the second leg of the project I had to take money out of my
children's school account. In the third let, BBC came forward and said
they would make a contract and gave me £90,000. The film has cost
£210,00. I am in debt for £120,000, and had to borrow from my mother
and a friend. I will make some money on it over the years because I
will be selling the documentary to other countries. I gave it free to
NDTV, because I told myself that I would not make a penny out of the
Indian version.

***And I can tell you hand-on-heart that we have not paid one rupee to
anyone we interviewed.*** [Emphasis added.]

It is absolutely untrue that Mukesh was talking in monosyllables and
that therefore I filmed him secretly. He was talking fluently from the
beginning about himself and conditions in the jail. We never did any
secret filming. As a world-renowned producer who has won a British
Oscar, I would never do a thing like that.

There was no secret filming of Mukesh at all. In fact, we needed to
put a mike on him.

*Are the parents of Nirbhaya still with you?*

Absolutely. Just two days ago I got a message from the father that
made me cry. "When you walk the right path, there will be obstacles,
there will be thorns" he said.

The parents agreed to her name being mentioned in the international
version, but not in the Indian one. At least a year ago the father
told me: "I am not ashamed. It is wrong that rape should adhere to the
rape victim. She suffered enough without shame being put on her. It is
the rapist who carries the shame, and the society that the rapist has
been encouraged by. All of them deserve that shame."

[email protected]
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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