Raees will not be released in Pakistan: censor board

CBFC says film will not release due to its 'objectionable' content

Screengrab from Raees

LAHORE:
The much-awaited Mahira and Shah Rukh Khan starrer Raees will not release in Pakistan.

The Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) said Monday the Rahul Dholakia directorial, which marks Mahira's Bollywood debut will not release in the country due to its 'objectionable' content.

"Owing to subtle portrayal of Muslims as criminals, violent and terrorists, the recommendations forwarded by the CBFC panel deemed the film unsuitable for public screening," a source privy to the development told The Express Tribune.

Raees censor screening underway across Pakistan

“We could not issue a certificate because the film portrays Islam and a particular Muslim sect in negative light,” the source added.

Most members objected to the film’s release, an official of the Punjab censor board said, adding that they will follow the decision of the central censor board.


CBFC chairman Mobashir Hasan could not be reached for comment.

The long awaited, self-imposed ban on Bollywood films ended on February 1 as Karachi’s Atrium Cinemas screened Hrithik Roshan’s Kaabil. The information ministry and CBFC also cleared Karan Johar’s Ae Dil Hai Mushkil for screening in the country.

Last week, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif gave the thumbs up to the information ministry to lift the ‘ban’.

According to an official handout issued by the information ministry, the government is “pleased to continue the existing open policy to display all international movies (including Indian films) in Pakistani cinemas”.

Govt lifts ‘ban’ on Indian movies

The statement, however, pointed out that the cinema houses would be allowed to screen movies only after approval from relevant censor boards.

Following Uri attacks and ‘surgical strikes’ along the Line of Control, Pakistani cinema owners in September 2016 had decided not to screen Indian movies until tensions between the two countries receded. They took the decision after the Indian Motion Picture Producers’ Association banned all Pakistani artists from working in film projects in India.
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