You can’t stop the race war in India.
The best you can do is bring it to the streets of London.
It’s close enough, because on the streets of London, mommy can watch the race war and nag the belligerents.
A group of masked men stormed a west London cinema shouting ‘down with India’ during a Bollywood film leaving customers ‘terrified’.
Footage shows the group interrupting a screening of the film ‘Emergency’ at Harrow Vue Cinema on Sunday night.
Saloni Belaid, who had bought tickets to the film, said the men had pushed themselves past staff members and shouted ‘down with India’ after the film was dibbed ‘anti-Sikh’.
She said: ‘It was really chaotic and scary. Ninety-five per cent of the audience cleared out while they were intimidating everyone whereas my friends and I stayed to confront them.
‘This was masked men shouting in the dark – we didn’t what their intentions were. It was frightening.’
The movie is based on that time when Indira Gandhi declared a national emergency and just arrested everyone she didn’t like, on top of doing millions of forced sterilizations
She told Times of India cinema staff did not come to help, and despite police arriving within 10 minutes they did not stop the group as they were exercising their right to protest.
Saloni said the men were part of the Khalistan separatist movement which aims to create a homeland for Sikhs.
The Hindi film Emergency has been dubbed ‘Anti-Sikh’ with protests also being held across the Midlands.
Viewings have been cancelled at Cineworlds in Wolverhampton and Birmingham.
Rashmi Chaubey, who posted the footage onto Facebook, said: ‘It’s a completely frightening and intimidating experience when 20+ men with masked faces and carrying a kirpan entered and blocked the exit in a dark theatre.
‘They were finally able to shut the movie. Police could not do anything and said it is their right to protest.
‘It marks a sad day where the right to protest was weaponised to suppress freedom of expression.’
…
The Sikh Press Association described the movie as ‘anti-Sikh Indian state propaganda’.
They said: ‘It provably displays inaccurate information which maligns revered Sikh figures. Such content perpetuates anti-Sikh hate and Indian state stereotypes demonizing the community, which makes up approximately just two per cent of India.
‘The theatres showing this nationalist propaganda are supporting something which poses a danger to Sikh communities today, justifying anti-Sikh hate, which is currently a major concern amid an uptake in India’s transnational violence.’
It probably was anti-Sikh propaganda.
But what does that have to do with the UK?
Why do British people want this on their streets?
(Nb4 “they don’t want it” – in no other era would peasants tolerate their government releasing all of these foreigners onto the streets. Furthermore, British women do appear to like this situation.)
There’s only one Sikh court in the world, and it’s in London