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Mumbai cinemas closed over "wrong language" spat

Tue Apr 29, 2008 3:47pm IST
 
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MUMBAI (Reuters Life!) - About a fifth of all cinemas in Mumbai, home to India's Bollywood, are being closed temporarily for not showing enough films in a local language, police said on Tuesday.

The move from the state's home ministry stems from of an old local law requiring Marathi-language films to be shown at least once a day for four weeks every year.

"It is the state language of Maharashtra state. People staying here have to respect that," said Vijaysingh Jadhav, a deputy commissioner for Mumbai police.

"Marathi films are also too good, they should screen them."

Mumbai is one of India's most cosmopolitan and liberal cities, but its leaders sometimes promote regulations favoring the Marathi people of Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital.

Marathis are now a minority in the city, but resentment about "outsiders" from the rest of India has sparked disturbances on Mumbai streets earlier this year.

In recent months, the pro-Marathi movement has seen politicians revive attempts to force companies to hire a minimum number of Maharashtrians on their staff.

Members of a recently formed pro-Marathi party have also beat up taxi drivers, many of whom come from northern India, saying their jobs could be done by people born closer to the city.

The cinema drive, the first of its kind, has seen 34 movie halls ordered shut for up to eight days, and prompted fears among owners that the crackdown may harm business.  Continued...

  Smoke and fire billows out of the Taj Hotel in Mumbai November 27, 2008.   REUTERS/Jayanta Shaw
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