‘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 court made the observation while refusing to grant interim protection from arrest to a woman charged by the Mumbai and Palghar police for allegedly making offensive remarks on Twitter against CM Uddhav Thackeray and his son Aditya Thackeray.
The Tablighi Jamaat congregation held in March in Delhi’s Nizamuddin has reportedly contributed to 30 per cent of the total Coronavirus cases in the country at that time.
The BCCI had obviously brought in it's own reasoning to the whole decision behind the termination and made its own claim.
The PIL has been filed by a law student, Vaishnavi Gholave, and a farmer from Maharashtra's Solapur, Mahesh Gadekar.
On June 15, the Bombay High Court permitted all flight operators to allow passengers to occupy middle seats in flights.