A film
depicting Bangladesh's 2013 Rana Plaza disaster has been banned by the high
court. Justices ruled film would "negatively portray" nation's $25
billion garment industry.
Deutsche Welle, 24 Aug 2015
High Court
judges ruled Monday that a drama based on the real-life garment factory
disaster could not be screened for six months. The ruling was in response to
objections filed by a trade group representing garment factory owners.
"The
judges imposed the ban following concerns that it would negatively portray
Bangladesh's sensitive garment sector in the world and can also create [a] law
and order problem in the country," Deputy Attorney General Mokleshur
Rahman told the AFP news agency.
The film is
entitled Rana Plaza after the factory complex that collapsed in April 2013,
killing at least 1,138 people, mostly female garment workers.
The
137-minute drama was scheduled to premiere September 4 at more than 100 cinemas
across Bangladesh following last month's clearance from the Bangladesh Film
Censor Board.
A national
heroine
![]() |
| 19-year-old Reshma Akter was rescued from the rubble of the Rana Plaza 17 days after the building collapsed. |
The plot
centers on the dramatic real-life rescue of a 19-year-old garment worker named
Reshma Akter from the ruins of the nine-storey Rana Plaza 17 days after it
collapsed.
Images of a
dazed Akter pulled alive from the wreckage were beamed around the globe and
since marrying her boyfriend and taking a job in the hospitality industry, she
has become a venerated figure in Bangladesh
"The
Rana Plaza is also about Reshma's love story, which tries to raise awareness
about the life of the country's millions of woman garment workers,"
director of the movie Nazrul Islam Khan told AFP.
But a
petition by the Bangladesh National Garment Workers Employees League - which
represents employers - argued that the film's use of graphic television footage
ran counter to censorship rules, which the court accepted.
The ruling
gave the Film Censor Board four weeks to justify its decision to try to give
the film a certificate. But the court did not explain why the ban would only
apply for six months, or in what circumstances it might be revisited after that
period.
Khan, the
film's director, said he's confused by the court ruling noting that he'd
already cut scenes deemed "too cruel" by censors.
"I
don't know what prompted the court to ban the film. Rana Plaza movie is about
the tragedy at the factory complex," he said.
The deadly
disaster at the garment factory that supplied many European household brands
brought to light substandard working conditions of much of Bangladesh's workforce.
jar/jil (AFP, dpa)


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