http://www.hindustantimes.com/bollywood/these-actors-were-charged-under-section-295a-before-kiku-sharda/story-vMJqps1bSZxQsjAOTcbBBN.html

These actors were charged under section 295A before Kiku Sharda
HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times, New Delhi |  Updated: Jan 13, 2016 18:11 IST

Section 295A of IPC deals with issues that can hurt religious sentiments.

The arrest of stand-up comedian Kiku Sharda in Mumbai over allegations
of hurting religious sentiments has attracted strong reactions from
across the social spectrum. The TV artist has been booked under
Section 295A of the Indian Penal Code (outraging religious feelings of
any class by insulting its religion or religious belief) for mimicking
self-styled spiritual leader Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh.
However, Sharda is not the first actor to be booked under Section
295A. Bollywood biggies like Shah Rukh Khan and Salman Khan have also
run into trouble with the same legal clause. Here’s a list of five
actors who were accused of hurting religious sentiments in the past:

Salman Khan

Salman Khan is controversy’s favourite child. (HT)

In September 2014, Salman Khan was accused of insulting Muslim
sentiments when a model walked the ramp with an Arabic word inscribed
on her T-shirt at a fashion show organised by the Bollywood star’s NGO
Being Human. This irked Mumbai resident Mohammad Asim Mohammad Arif
who filed a complaint against Salman.

Shah Rukh Khan

SRK was recently involved in a heated intolerance debate as well. (AP)

In 2012, the Badshah of Bollywood found himself in a legal tangle when
a case was filed against him in Bihar’s Muzaffarpur district over a
song in the film Student Of The Year. Apparently, the song “Radha on
the dance floor” didn’t go down well with some locals and they filed a
complaint against SRK and his wife Gauri who co-produced the film.

Aamir Khan

Aamir Khan in a still from Rajkumar Hirani’s PK. (YouTube)

Aamir went through a lot of trouble during the making of the 2014 hit
film PK. The film was mostly shot in Delhi and that phase wasn’t a
cakewalk for the actor. During the shooting of one of the sequences,
an actor was supposed to dress up like Lord Shiva and pull a rickshaw
on which two burqa-clad women were sitting. Some Old Delhi residents
objected to this and a complaint was lodged at the local police
station. Aamir Khan was also a party in this case.
Sunny Deol

Mohalla Assi was based on a Hindi novel Kashi Ka Assi. (YouTube)

Deol, who is known for playing an ultra patriot in films like Border
and Gadar, found himself on the wrong side of the law when he was
accused of maligning the image of Varanasi and making fun of popular
Hindu beliefs. The trailer of his film, Mohalla Assi, was laden with
cusswords which angered Bihar lawyer Sudhir Kumar Ojha who brought it
up in court. Deol, along with the film’s director, Chandra Prakash
Dwivedi, was made a party in the case.

Akshay Kumar

OMG was based on a Gujarati play. (YouTube)

The 2012 film Oh My God brought Kumar a lot of appreciation, but also
generated some unwanted problems. An FIR was filed in Rajasthan’s
Ajmer city against Kumar and the film’s director, Umesh Shukla, for
“hurting the religious sentiments” of Hindus. The complainants were
not happy with the way matters of faith were depicted in the film.

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