Rapist's TV interview blaming women for sexual assaults banned in India

Rapist's TV interview blaming women for sexual assaults banned in India
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By Keith Walker with APTN
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Television documentary “India’s daughter” which features an interview with a man convicted of gang-raping and killing a woman in Dehli has been

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Television documentary “India’s daughter” which features an interview with a man convicted of gang-raping and killing a woman in Dehli has been banned in India.

During the interview Mukesh Singh said Indian women have only themselves to blame if they venture out at night and attract the unwanted attention of others.

Singh was the driver of the bus the night Jyoti Singh boarded with her friend after a night out at the cinema. The 23-year-old was raped and beaten with iron bars.

She later died from her injuries in an incident that prompted widespread demonstrations across India and outrage around the world.

Singh’s comments were made during an interview for a BBC television documentary “India’s Daughter” which had now been banned in India.

#IndiasDaughter director Leslee Udwin writes on the ban http://t.co/AuXyddfgIspic.twitter.com/6uRgIOiaLn

— Tania Goklany (@TaniaGoklany) March 4, 2015

British filmmaker Leslie Ukwin produced the documentary “India’s Daughter.”

“I got an insight and an understanding into the way he (Mukesh Singh, one of the convicts in the gang rape case) views women and that is what is extremely shocking. Not what he did but what he thinks that led him to do what he did and it’s not just he who thinks that. It is a societal problem,” said Ukwin.

India, where many people have long believed that women are responsible for rape, was shocked into action after the 2012 attack.

Singh and three other men were convicted in 2013.

They confessed to the attack but later retracted their confessions, saying they’d been tortured into admitting their involvement.

Appeals against their death sentences are pending in India’s Supreme Court.

India’s daughter will still be shown on Sunday (March 8), International Women’s Day, in Britain, Denmark, Sweden and several other countries.

Asha Devi, Jyoti's mother says "Have seen the documentary, support it" #IndiasDaughter#LiftTheBan@ndtvpic.twitter.com/a9bj7RjIHb

— India's Daughter (@IndiasDaughter) March 4, 2015

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