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Lal Bahadur Shastris grandsons send legal notice to Shastri bio-pic maker

11 Apr 2019

It seems last-minute legal hurdles to the release of a film are now becoming a norm, even from supposedly sensible quarters.Director Vivek Agnihotri whose film Tashkent Files shedding light on the mysterious death of former prime minister Lal Bahadur Shastri, is to release on Friday, finds himself in a legal soup, and that too from Lal Bahadurs Shastris grandsons Vibhakar and Diwakar Shastri. The legal notice (which this writer has a copy of) accuses Agnihotri of trying to create unnecessary controversy about the death of Shastri in Tashkent which, says the legal notice, was natural (the death, not the controversy). While Viveks legal team is looking into how to get around this last-minute hurdle, Vivek speaks exclusively to this writer about the crisis. My film on Lal Bahadur Shastri tries for the first time to set the record straight about the quiet heros death. What really happened to Shastriji in Tashkent? That is the question my film tries to answer. Shastrijis grandsons saw the film some days ago. There was not a word of criticism about anything in the film. They loved the film. Then, I really dont know why suddenly all these reservations have come up just hours before my films release. Vivek feels Shastrijis grandsons have been provoked by their parent-party the Congress I to take this action. What are they frightened of? It is very ironical that the legal notice comes from Shastrijis kin. It seems theyve forgotten that Lal Bahadur Shastri was a Congress prime minister. Vivek hopes there would be no hurdle to the films release. We have got a clearance from the Censor Board. That is all we need for the film to release.