Pakistan boycotts Oscar-nominated film on Osama hunt, US dramas
Top Stories
- Spot-fixing: Chandila was in touch with four sets of bookies, says Delhi Police
- Chinese Premier Li Keqiang arrives, to hold talks with PM on boundary, water issues
- IPL 2013: Delhi Daredevils crash to defeat, finish last
- Jaganmohan's wife attacks CBI, accuses it of working at Congress behest
- Blast accused death: UP govt seeks CBI probe, FIR against 42 persons

Pakistani movie distributors and TV stations are boycotting an Oscar-nominated film about the hunt for Osama bin Laden and popular US dramas to avoid offending sensibilities or sparking a violent backlash.
Pakistan may have a starring role in Kathryn Bigelow's "Zero Dark Thirty", which dramatises the 10-year CIA hunt for the 9/11 mastermind, but local cinemas are steering clear of a film they say could make people feel humiliated.
Similarly, a local cable distributor is blocking transmission of the smash hit dramas "Homeland", starring
Claire Danes, and "Last Resort" on the grounds they are against the national interest.
The boycotts are the latest form of unofficial censorship in the conservative country, where YouTube has been blocked for four months over a trailer for an American film considered offensive to Muslims.
"Zero Dark Thirty" has topped the box office charts in the US and earned five Oscar nods. But in Pakistan, the raid to kill bin Laden is considered one of the blacker incidents in the country's history.
A US Navy SEAL team killed the Al-Qaeda chief in his hideout less than a mile from Pakistan's premier military academy on May 2, 2011, embarrassing Pakistani leaders who insisted bin Laden was dead and exposing its military to accusations of incompetence or collusion with Al-Qaeda.
"We have not and neither has anyone else bought Zero Dark Thirty," said Mohsin Yaseen, a representative for film distribution company Cinepax.
He described the film as "pro-American", despite controversy in the United States over its depictions of so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques," widely seen as torture.
"It has several scenes which could make us feel humiliated. It is against the interests of Pakistani nation," said Yaseen.
The chairman of the Film Censors Board told AFP it had not reviewed "Zero Dark Thirty" because there had been no request to do so.
Editors’ Pick
- Quake-hit and shaken, Bhaderwah spends nights in the open
- UP blast accused dies on way to jail, govt wanted to drop case against him
- Former civil aviation secy changes mind, seeks airport security exemption as EC
- BCCI suspects Gujarat players in other teams were also approached
- Police on money trail, Sreesanth in fresh trouble
- Chhattisgarh 'encounter' leaves 8 villagers dead, no Maoist link yet
- Chinese Premier Li Keqiang arrives today, PM to seek early revival of border talks


Agent in America raises funds for Imran's party, sends over $7 lakh
Texting while driving?
Violence grips Bangladesh as Islamists demand stricter blasphemy law
David Cameron warned: 'Shed elitist image'



















