Mumbai police ask YouTube, Facebook to block video

Indian police asked YouTube and Facebook to block a video by comedian Tanmay Bhat poking f
AFP

Mumbai (AFP) – Indian police said Monday they had asked YouTube and Facebook to block a video poking fun at cricket great Sachin Tendulkar, sparking the country’s latest row over freedom of expression.

Comedian Tanmay Bhat posted the clip, which also mocked famous Indian movie singer Lata Mangeshkar, on his Facebook page last week, angering right-wing politicians in Mumbai who complained to police.

Police in the western Indian city received two complaints — one from a local politician belonging to Narendra Modi’s ruling Bhartiya Janata Party who said the clip was defamatory.

The other was from Maharashtra Navnirman Sena, a fringe pro-Marathi party in Mumbai, which is the capital of Maharashtra state, force spokesman Sangramsingh Nishandar said.

“We have sought a legal opinion. In the meantime we have written to YouTube and Facebook to block the above-mentioned video,” Nishandar told AFP.

In the two-minute clip Bhat, a member of online comedy group AIB, mimics a conversation between Tendulkar and Mangeshkar.

He said Mangeshkar, who is 86, looked like she’d been kept in water for eight days and suggested she should die.

Bhat posted a comment with the video describing it as “nonsense”.

“Also I obviously love Lata and Sachin, just having some fun,” he wrote.

AIB fell foul of authorities last year when they were at the centre of an obscenity investigation over some sexually explicit jokes in a comedy “roast” show featuring several Bollywood stars.

India, the world’s largest democracy, has long been proud of its tradition of artistic, cultural and religious freedoms but a series of bans recently sparked accusations of a growing climate of intolerance under Hindu nationalist PM Modi.

Last year a British-made documentary about an infamous 2012 gang-rape in Delhi was banned while a government-appointed board of censors blocked the release of the erotic movie “Fifty Shades of Grey” in cinemas.

Critics say the bans show how thin-skinned their politicians have become in the Internet age.

Many social media users accused Bhatt’s video of being vulgar and unfunny on Monday but also defended his right to make it.

“If only political parties got this worked up about rape, communalism & homophobia like they did about @thetanmay’s video! #TanmayBhat,” wrote one Twitter user.

“Totally agree. video is crass & not funny. But does he have right to make it? Hell Yes. #TanmayBhat,” wrote another.

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