News India After JNU, Jamia, students of this top university plan to screen BBC documentary on PM Modi

After JNU, Jamia, students of this top university plan to screen BBC documentary on PM Modi

The Student Federation of India (SFI) will show the documentary at Jadavpur University on Thursday and at Presidency University.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a public rally. Image Source : PTI (FILE)Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a public rally.

BBC documentary controversy: Left student bodies of West Bengal have planned to screen the controversial BBC documentary on the 2002 Gujarat riots and Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the campuses of at least two universities of Kolkata.

The Student Federation of India (SFI) will show the documentary at Jadavpur University on Thursday and at Presidency University the day after, the state organisation’s assistant secretary Subhajit Sarkar said. “The documentary will be screened via a projector. We are yet to get permission from the university authorities. We will carry on with the screening even if we do not get it,” Sarkar said.

“We hope that many of the general students, including those who don’t support us, will come and watch it. We want people to join us in discussion and debate about the film,” he said.

All India Students’ Association (AISA), another Left body, also decided to screen the documentary on the campus of Jadavpur University on January 27, said Sandip Nayak, a senior member of the organisation. Members of Presidency University’s visual arts society will also screen the documentary on February 1, said Moitreyo Sarkar, one of the organisers.

Earlier on Tuesday, some students of the Jawaharlal Nehru University watched the documentary on their personal devices even though the administration cut the power supply and internet.

MEA calls it a 'propaganda piece

Earlier last week, India condemned the documentary series on PM Modi and described it as a ‘propaganda piece’ designed to push a discredited narrative. “We think this is a propaganda piece designed to push a particular discredited narrative. The bias and lack of objectivity and frankly continuing colonial mindset are blatantly visible,” External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said during a weekly media briefing.

Earlier on Saturday, the University of Hyderabad (UoH) showed the first episode of the documentary to nearly 200 students on campus. Subsequently, a probe will be initiated on receiving a written complaint, said police officials. 

Also Read: JNU students watch banned BBC documentary on PM Modi; attacked with stones I VIDEO

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