AIB Roast Video Pulled Down Because Of Huge Controversy

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AIB deletes controversial 'roast' video from YouTube but is protected by legal precedent

 

In a sensational twist to the existing AIB roast controversy, the controversial three part video has been  taken down.  AIB has tweeted saying

 

'I cannot answer AIB's vulgarity with charity' -Ashoke Pandit

The AIB Roast has been blocked and this is what one can see in their youtube page

Aib roast video

AIB roast video, featuring Ranveer Singh and Arjun Kapoor with Karan Johar as Roast master got massive reaction from the social media but ran into trouble when several organisations filed FIR against the alleged obscene nature of the content. Their voice got louder with censor board member Ashoke Pandit also coming  out heavily against the AIB roast video, calling it obscene.

But the final nail in the coffin for AIB may have been the view taken by Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis. Maharashtra Chief Minister commented upon this incident. "If the AIB roast was vulgar and not in accordance with the law, then we will act."

Maharashtra government on Monday ordered an inquiry into a comedy show held here even as police launched a probe following a complaint against filmmaker Karan Johar, actor Arjun Kapoor and Ranveer Singh, among others, for allegedly using "filthy and abusive language" during the event.

According to the written complaint by Akhilesh Tiwari, president of Brahman Ekta Seva Sanstha in Mumbai, filed at Sakinaka police station on Monday, the trio, along with other performers, had allegedly passed abusive and offensive remarks against one another and at the audience present there, police said.

In his four-page complaint at Sakinaka police station, Tiwari sought a criminal case against Johar, Kapoor and Singh as well as the show organiser, among others.

"I have handed over a letter to Sakinaka police demanding a criminal complaint be lodged against these so-called youth icons Karan Johar, Arjun Kapoor and Ranveer Singh. The show, which can be seen on YouTube and other websites, was extremely abusive and it is not only ruining the clean image of the Indian culture & women but is also misleading today's youth," said Tiwari.

One of these groups, the Brahman Ekta Seva Santha, demanded that an FIR be lodged against the organisers, directors, producers and actors for obscenity as “it was an attack on Indian culture”. The statements of various Christian organisations have also been recorded by the Mumbai police as these groups have taken offence to the participants’ mockery of Catholic priests.

Under Article 19 of the Constitution, each person has the right to free speech and expression, but the State may restrict this right in the interests of decency and morality. This is exactly what Section 294 of the Indian Penal Code seeks to do as it makes it an offence to sing, recite or utter “any obscene song, ballad or words in or near any public place” to the annoyance of others.

Annoyance of others

Thus, the first element to constitute the offence under Section 294 is to prove that the act caused annoyance to others. In the case of Narendra H. Khurana in 2003, the petitioner complained that female dancers at the Blue Nile cabaret in Mumbai’s Colaba neighbourhood were performing semi-nude dances. The question for consideration in that case was as follows:

“Whether the nude cabaret dances which are per se indecent and obscene, held in a restaurant on purchase of tickets would warrant prosecution under Section 294 of the Indian Penal Code in the absence of express evidence of annoyance by any of the persons who attend such shows?”

The Bombay High Court held that that mere performance of an obscene or indecent act is not sufficient, but there must be “a further proof to establish that it was to the annoyance of others”.

But the court held that the section does not limit the scope of the word “others” to mean the person who is the victim of the obscene act. It is enough if the obscene act is committed in public and causes annoyance to anybody, be it the contemplated victim of the offender or not.

In the case of the AIB roast, individuals also purchased tickets to attend the show, but as none of the individuals who attended the event have actually complained, one can safely conclude that it did not cause any annoyance to the attendees. The question therefore is whether the individuals who were annoyed by watching the event on YouTube constitute “others” under Section 294 of the IPC.

Persons actually witnessing the act

The Bombay High Court has clearly stated that the question as to an act being to the annoyance of the others cannot be considered objectively without reference to the persons actually witnessing the act. The court went on to state that:

“…it could not have been the intention of the Legislature that even if a particular obscene act done in a public place is enjoyed by all those witnessing the same without in any way getting annoyed thereby, it can still be considered to be an offence under the section, if looking at it objectively, the Court finds that it would have annoyed others who were not actually present to witness the said act.”

What this essentially means is that, even if Karan Johar is not offended by a joke made by Ranveer Singh about his sexual orientation, it is sufficient if Karan Johar’s mother, provided she was in attendance (which she was), is annoyed. But the members from the various groups who have taken offence who have been annoyed by watching the YouTube video were not in attendance at the event. This means AIB are in the clear.

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