The BBC documentary India's government doesn't want people to see

University students across India have been protesting the government's suppression of a new BBC documentary

Image | Narendra Modi

Caption: India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi (C) waves to his supporters during a roadshow ahead of the BJP national executive meet in New Delhi on January 16, 2023. (Sajjad Hussain/AFP via Getty Images)

Media Audio | Nothing is Foreign : The BBC documentary India's government doesn't want people to see

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University students across India have been protesting the government's suppression of a recently released BBC documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. It's about his role in the 2002 Gujarat riots, where over a thousand people were killed, mostly Muslims.
The Indian government suppressed the documentary by using emergency powers, stemming from an IT law it created in 2021 that allows for the removal of online content considered fake or false by the government, or seen as a threat to public order.
This week on Nothing is Foreign, we get into the support and backlash to Modi shutting down screenings of the BBC documentary and what that says about growing concerns around censorship and freedom of expression in the country.
Featuring:
  • Ajoy Ashirwad, political editor at The Wire, an independent news agency based in Delhi.
Nothing is Foreign(external link), a podcast from CBC News and CBC Podcasts, is a weekly trip to where the story is unfolding. It's hosted by Tamara Khandaker.

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(CBC)