Home Latest News Bangladesh Bans Film About Islamist Café Siege

Bangladesh Bans Film About Islamist Café Siege

by AFP

AFP

Film Censor Board denies release of ‘Shonibar Bikele’ stating ‘it would disrupt internal security’ and ‘tarnish the country’s global image’

Bangladesh has banned a film based on a 2016 café attack claimed by the Islamic State group that left 22 people dead, saying it would damage the country’s reputation.

The Film Censor Board denied the theatrical release of Shonibar Bikele, a decision the movie’s director criticized as “unhealthy for artistic expression.”

The title of the film translates to “Saturday Afternoon” and dramatizes the July 2016 attack on an upmarket cafe by Islamist militants who killed 22 of their hostages, including 18 foreigners.

The state’s censor board said the film—a Bangladesh-German co-production—could incite religious fervor in the Muslim-majority nation of 165 million. “The board did not sanction permission for the movie’s exhibition, both at home or abroad, as it would disrupt internal security and also tarnish the country’s global image,” the censor board’s vice chairman Nizamul Kabir said on Thursday.

Bangladesh has suffered from homegrown extremism for decades, but the Holey Artisan Café attack was the worst in years and seen as a major blow to the country’s image as a moderate Muslim nation. The government has always denied the five young men who seized the cafe for hours before killing many hostages and dying themselves were linked to the Islamic State group.

Director Mostofa Sarwar Farooki criticised the decision to ban his film. “Filmmakers should feel free to take inspiration from any incident that happens around them,” the eminent Bangladeshi director said. “They don’t tarnish an image. They only interpret events. It’s real world actions that can damage an image,” he said. He said they would appeal against the decision in the hope of gaining a theatrical release.

The mastermind of the café attack was killed in a subsequent crackdown on homegrown militancy that has left at least 100 alleged homegrown fighters dead.

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