Oppn voice being muzzled: WB CM on CBFC direction on Amartya Sen documentary

In her Twitter handle, Mamata Banerjee said if somebody like Amartya Sen cannot express himself freely, what hope does common citizen have.

Update: 2017-07-12 13:14 GMT
Mamata Banerjee said that her party will ask for judicial inquiry into incidents at Baduria and Basirhat (Photo: ANI | Twitter)

Kolkata: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday reacted sharply to the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) asking filmmaker Suman Ghosh to "mute" four words and phrases, including 'cow' and 'Gujarat', in his documentary on Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen. 

"Every single voice of the opposition is being muzzled. Now, Dr Amartya Sen (sic)," she wrote on her Twitter handle.

"If somebody of his (Sen) stature cannot express himself freely, what hope does the common citizen have," the Trinamool Congress (TMC) supremo wrote on the microblogging website. 

In the documentary, 'The Argumentative Indian', Sen speaks of social choice theory, development economics, philosophy and the rise of right-wing nationalism across the world, including in India. 

Ghosh's documentary has been made over a span of 15 years (2002-2017) and is structured as a conversation between Sen and his student, economist Kaushik Basu. 

Earlier, the filmmaker said the CBFC's regional office in Kolkata had verbally communicated to him to "mute" four words and phrases - 'Gujarat', 'Cow', 'Hindutva view of India' and 'Hindu India' - in his documentary on Sen.

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