Govt's decision to BAN #IndiasDaughter - a BBC documentary by an award-winning director - damages India's image the most.
— KABIR BEDI (@iKabirBedi) March 5, 2015
I found #IndiasDaughter far more sensitively done than many angry ugly invasive debates on the same issue that happen on our TV channels.
— Chetan Bhagat (@chetan_bhagat) March 5, 2015
Forget ban, #IndiasDaughter is must watch. Anyone who watches will understand devastation caused by regressive attitudes. Face it. Fix it.
— Chetan Bhagat (@chetan_bhagat) March 5, 2015
India's daughter shows incredible courage of woman, male comrades,the bestiality that must be punished if we are to progress. A must watch
— Sagarika Ghose (@sagarikaghose) March 5, 2015
The populist claptrap & dubious nationalism propagated by some TV anchors has clearly boomeranged on them. Just desserts. #IndiasDaughter
— Sanjay Jha (@JhaSanjay) March 5, 2015
#BBC #IndiasDaughter shows the beasts as beasts! Is showing the truth a crime!? Ban your sick minds! Why ban this brilliant Docu?!
— sudhir tailang (@sudhirtailang) March 5, 2015
Is it contempt of court to watch #IndiasDaughter? In that case lot of contempt happening right now! Good to see technology beat stupidity.
— Akash Banerjee (@akashbanerjee) March 5, 2015
Instead of ad hoc bans, focus on hanging Nirbhaya rapists & booking lawyers for inciting hatred. Can't brush aside India's medieval mindsets
— Milind Deora (@milinddeora) March 4, 2015
Ironic that a documentary about someone named Nirbhaya should strike such fear into the world's greatest civilization
— RushdieExplainsIndia (@RushdieExplains) March 5, 2015
Govt logic on #IndiasDaughter documentary: Hear no evil, see no evil. Therefore, there will be no evil. Wow.
— Vishnu Som (@VishnuNDTV) March 5, 2015
#IndiasDaughter should be required viewing for everyone in India, starting with the ignoramuses we put in Parliament.
— Sonia Faleiro (@soniafaleiro) March 4, 2015