Source:AFP Published: 2015-8-25 18:23:02
A top court in Bangladesh Monday banned a movie depicting one of the world's worst industrial disasters for six months amid concerns that it would "negatively portray" the nation's $25 billion garment industry.
Two High Court judges gave the order, saying the movie, Rana Plaza, named after the ill-fated factory complex, breached a previous order by the same court by screening gruesome images of the disaster that killed 1,138 people in 2013.
"The court heard a writ filed by a labor group and banned screening of the film in the country and overseas for six months," Deputy Attorney General Mokleshur Rahman told AFP.
"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," he added.
The 137-minute film was scheduled to hit more than 100 theatres across the country on September 4 after it got clearance from the Bangladesh Film Censor Board in July.
It centers on the rescue of 19-year-old garment worker Reshma Akhter from the ruins of the nine-storey Rana Plaza 17 days after it collapsed.
Akhter has since married and found a well-paid job at a hotel run by the international chain Westin.
"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.
AFP