Live · Global · Independent
Live Feeds
PinkVilla
Forbes
NDTV
Hindustan Times
Exclusive: Medha Shankr on working with Vikrant Massey Vidhu Vinod Chopra and more in 12th Fail
onmynews.com

Exclusive: Medha Shankr on working with Vikrant Massey Vidhu Vinod Chopra and more in 12th Fail

Medha Shankr is getting all the love from the audience for her role, IRS Shraddha Joshi in the much-loved film i.e. Vidhu Vinod Chopra’s 12th Fail. In the exclusive interview with Filmfare, Medha opened up about working with Vidhu Vinod Chopra, Vikrant Massey and her character in the film.

How did you land a role in 12th Fail?

When I auditioned for the film at the casting agency, I didn’t know much about the film but when I screen-tested with Vidhu VInod Chopra and Vikrant Massey, I was very confident for some reason. Shraddha is not just a romantic interest of Manoj, she is such a big part of his journey and his struggle and she is such a woman of strength. So, for me, playing her was like a dream come true and apart from the fact that the character is wonderful, the story is wonderful because when I read the book I cried at so many points and I related with Shraddha and Manoj.

What was your rapport with Vikrant like?

Vikrant and I actually became friends mostly during promotions.During the filming, we were all on our toes because we’re working with Vidhu Vinod Chopra sir. And we all know he’s a genius and he demands a certain standard of work from every actor and not just actors, just every department. So all of us were hyper focused on our jobs. But of course promotions were super fun. And that’s when mostly Vikrant and I bonded. He’s a really, really nice guy. But on sets I would say he’s been really kind to me. Like he would always once in a while ask, “Medha, are you feeling okay? Is everything okay?”

What is working with Vidhu Vinod Chopra like?

He’s a perfectionist. He demands a certain standard of work and you have to give, deliver that standard of work, right? And if you’re not able to reach that level, he also knows how to squeeze that out of you. He knows how to direct you in a way that you bring out your best. So, in that regard, he really pushes you. Right? And you bring out, he brings out the best in you as an actor. And at the same time, I will tell you, he’s one of the kindest, most fun people that I’ve worked with. Because I’ll tell you one of the sweetest things that Vidhu sir does is every time an actor or anybody in any department, somebody does a great job, like an extraordinary job, he gives 20 bucks to them. He’s like, “if I’ve given a really good shot, 20 bucks to Medha”. And there is one person from his team who’s keeping track of it. It’s very heartwarming and makes you feel special.

See Also: Exclusive: “My character in 12th Fail felt so real that I was in tears,” says Vikrant Massey

Read full article
Bilkis Bano Says “Can Breathe Again” After Supreme Court Verdict
onmynews.com

Bilkis Bano Says “Can Breathe Again” After Supreme Court Verdict

Bilkis Bano, the survivor of one of the most horrific crimes  during the 2002 Gujarat riots, said today is “truly the New Year” for her as the 11 men responsible for killing her family and gangraping her will soon be back behind the bars. Earlier today, the Supreme Court ruled that convicts, who got released last year for “good behaviour”, must return to jail.

The convicts have to surrender within two weeks, the top court said, declaring that the exercise of power by the Gujarat government was “without application of mind”. The state was not competent to release the men, since only the state where the trial was held — in this case Maharashtra — is empowered to do this, the judges pointed out.

“I have wept tears of relief. I have smiled for the first time in over a year and half. I have hugged my children. It feels like a stone the size of a mountain has been lifted from my chest, and I can breathe again,” Nilkis Bano said in a statement issued through her lawyer Shobha Gupta.

“This is what justice feels like. I thank the honourable Supreme Court of India for giving me, my children and women everywhere, this vindication and hope in the promise of equal justice for all,” she said.

“A year and half ago, on August 15, 2022, when those who had destroyed my family and terrorised my very existence, were given an early release, I simply collapsed,” she said. To those who stood with her during that period, “my gratitude for your precious solidarity and strength,” she said. “You gave me the will to struggle, to rescue the idea of justice not just for me, but for every woman in India. I thank you,” Bilkis Bano said.

“It was as if a decision was made first and process applied later, and if i dare say, unmindfully,” remarked Shobha Gupta, who has been Bilkis Bano’s legal counsel for decades. She also questioned the “good behaviour” of the men that was cited for their release. “What was the reflection of the good behaviour? Nothing was reflecting,” she said.

The men were released on Independence Day last year by the Gujarat government through an obsolete law, setting off a wave of outrage across the country. Bilkis Bano said she was was not informed about the release and expressed concern about the huge risk to her security it entailed.
    
Once out, the men received a hero’s welcome, with sweets and garlands. Some of them were later spotted sharing stage with a BJP MP and MLA.

The convict who made the initial petition for release, Radheshaym Shah, had even started practicing law, the top court was told during the hearing.

Read full article
When India Said No To China’s Offer After 2019 Balakot Strikes
onmynews.com

When India Said No To China’s Offer After 2019 Balakot Strikes

In the aftermath of India’s Balakot strikes, several countries offered to send special envoys and China too suggested that it could send its deputy minister to both countries to seek de-escalation but New Delhi declined the offer, says former diplomat Ajay Bisaria.

In his upcoming book, Mr Bisaria, who was serving as Indian High Commissioner to Islamabad in that period, also writes that India was willing to send an aircraft of the Indian Air Force to Pakistan to bring back Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, but the Pakistani government refused permission.

Varthaman (now Group Captain) downed a Pakistani jet on February 27, 2019, before his MiG 21 Bison jet was hit in a dogfight.

Pakistan had launched the retaliation for the Balakot airstrikes a day before. Varthaman was captured by the Pakistani Army and was released two days later.

“We were willing to send an Indian Air Force aircraft to pick him up but Pakistan refused permission; the optics of an Indian Air Force plane landing in Islamabad after all that had happened over the previous three days, was, of course, not acceptable to Pakistan,” Mr Bisaria writes.

In his book, ‘Anger Management: The Troubled Diplomatic Relationship Between India and Pakistan’, he also says several countries had offered to send special envoys over to the subcontinent but this was no longer necessary.

“Even China, not to be left behind, had suggested that it could send its deputy minister to both countries to seek de-escalation. India had politely declined the offer,” he says.

In the book published by Rupa, Mr Bisaria, who had a distinguished diplomatic career spanning 35 years, delves into various aspects of India-Pakistan relations since Independence.

The ties between India and Pakistan came under severe strain after India’s warplanes pounded a Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorist training camp in Balakot in Pakistan on February 26, 2019, in response to the Pulwama terror attack.

Mr Bisaria says that the day after India’s air strikes at Balakot, the ambassadors of the US, UK, and France were informed during a briefing by the then Pakistan foreign secretary Tehmina Janjua about a message she received from the Pakistan Army.

The message said that “nine missiles from India had been pointed towards Pakistan, to be launched any time that day”.

“The foreign secretary requested the envoys to report this intelligence to their capitals and ask India not to escalate the situation. The diplomats promptly reported these developments, leading to a flurry of diplomatic activity in Islamabad, P5 capitals, and in New Delhi that night,” Mr Bisaria writes.

The permanent members of the UN Security Council, Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States, China and France are known as P5 nations.

“One of them recommended to her that Pakistan should convey its concerns directly to India,” says Mr Bisaria.

Mr Bisaria also writes that then Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan wanted to talk to his Indian counterpart.

“At around midnight I got a call in Delhi from Pakistani High Commissioner Sohail Mahmood, now in Islamabad, who said that PM Imran Khan was keen to talk to Prime Minister Modi,” he says.

“I checked upstairs and responded that our prime minister was not available at this hour but in case Imran Khan had any urgent message to convey he could, of course, convey it to me. I got no call back that night,” he recounts.

“The US and UK envoys in Delhi got back overnight to India’s foreign secretary to claim that Pakistan was now ready to de-escalate the situation, to act on India’s dossier, and to seriously address the issue of terrorism,” he says.

Mr Bisaria says “Pakistan’s PM would himself make these announcements and the pilot would be returned to India the next day.

He says India’s “coercive diplomacy” had been effective, its expectations of Pakistan and of the world had been clear, backed by a credible resolve to escalate the crisis.

“Prime Minister Modi would later say in a campaign speech that, ‘Fortunately, Pakistan announced that the pilot would be sent back to India. Else, it would have been qatal ki raat, a night of bloodshed'”.

On overall regional geopolitics, Mr Bisaria writes that Pakistan Prime Minister, Imran Khan conveyed to China that it should support Islamabad since the United States decided to back India against China, but Chinese President Xi Jinping “declared that China would not be propping up Pakistan against India”.

“I also learnt that Khan had told the Chinese that they should support Pakistan since the US had decided to support India against China. President Xi Jinping apparently responded sharply to Imran Khan for this simplistic geopolitical assessment and declared that China would not be propping up Pakistan against India,” he says.

“He had advised Khan that it was the US that could help Pakistan in its India relationship and it would be in Pakistan’s interest to make up with the US as well as with Afghanistan,” Mr Bisaria writes.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Read full article
Link copied!