Police Violence, Inner Workings Of Power Put Under The Scanner In Artist-Filmmaker Pallavi Paul’s ‘The Blind Rabbit’

Premiered at the 50th International Film Festival Rotterdam earlier this week, 'The Blind Rabbit' looks at the Emergency, 1984 riots, 2019 Jamia Library attack and the 2020 Delhi riots.
Faizal Khan, Money Control Features, June 5, 2021

Somewhere in the middle of Pallavi Paul's new film, The Blind Rabbit, is a heart-rending story of children arrested during the Emergency unable to remember their home address when the time comes for their release. There were hundreds of boys aged 7-16 who were picked up from the streets during 1975-77 to bump up the number of daily detentions.

 

"At the time police were instructed to make 18-20 arrests every day," says a retired police officer who is interviewed in the film. The officer, whose identity is not revealed, goes on to say that under pressure "very young children" were also put in jails and remand homes after "falsely" tagging them as "found while committing a crime".

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