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MUMBAI: Buoyed by a
successful campaign against a publisher of joke books, members of the Sikh
community have now approached the Mumbai police to block any form of humour
on the net targeting them. The cyber
cell department of the crime branch has received a plea asking it to "ban
jokes on the internet" which portray Sardars as objects of ridicule.
Community heads feel the jokes, many of them
bordering on the obscene, have begun to have such a demoralising effect on
Sikh youths that they feel "ashamed when they interact with members of other
communities."
The latest provocation was the publication of
the Santa and Banta Joke Book found stocked by a Matunga-based book
publisher. Ranjit Parande had been selling copies of the book for the last
year and a half. On Sunday, nearly 25
Sikh youths from a youth body, Sikh Media and Culture Watch (SMCW) gathered
in front of the Shivaji Park police station demanding Parande's arrest.
Based on a complaint filed by Sikh
businessman Mohinderpal Nanksingh Kakar (42), the police have now arrested
Parande under section 295 of the IPC which is non-bailable in nature. The
section deals with "hurting religious sentiments."
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/NEWS/Cities/Sikhs_ask_cops_to_ban_Sardar_jokes_on_
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