‘Emergency’ can be released if producers make suggested cuts: CBFC tells Bombay HC
The development comes days after the High Court slammed the CBFC for failing to decide on the certification of the movie.
The development comes days after the High Court slammed the CBFC for failing to decide on the certification of the movie.
The CBFC has issued a U/A certificate for 'Emergency' and suggested cuts, disclaimers, and fact-checking for certain scenes.
The court ordered the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) to decide on the objections of Sikh groups by September 18.
The bench also expressed strong disapproval of the manner in which the Badlapur Police handled the investigation into the gruesome incident.
Two four-year-old girls in Badlapur, Thane district were allegedly sexually assaulted inside the school toilet by a sweeper.
The bench earlier this month asked the government to reconsider and had asked it to inform if it was willing to share some of the documents.
While granting time, Justice S.K. Shinde allowed an interim order preventing Kundra's arrest till August 25, when the next hearing is scheduled.
On Tuesday, Tejpal's lawyer Amit Desai requested the high court's bench at Goa comprising Justices M S Sonak and M S Jawalkar to hold the hearing "in-camera", as was done in the past during the trial of the case in the lower court.
Mehta made the disclosure in a lighter vein to the Bombay High Court, during a discussion for setting up a fresh date for the ongoing hearings related to an appeal filed by the Goa government, against the acquittal of former Tehelka editor-in-chief Tarun Tejpal by a trial court in May this year.
Counsels of Facebook had said that the matter raised before the HC was "in the realm of contract and if at all the petitioner has any grievance, the petitioner will have to seek redressal before any appropriate forum which is empowered to adjudicate the disputes between the two private parties.