New Delhi: Amid demands by a section of social media users for a boycott of the series ‘IC 814: The Kandahar Hijack’ for allegedly hiding the real identities of the terrorists involved in the 1999 incident, casting director Mukesh Chhabra claimed that the perpetrators used nicknames for each other and proper research was done for the show.
Directed by Anubhav Sinha, the series is based on the 1999 hijack of an Indian aircraft by five terrorists on December 24, 1999, 40 minutes after it took off from Kathmandu. It started streaming on ‘Netflix’ on August 29.
Using hashtags #BoycottNetflix, #BoycottBollywood and #IC814, many ‘X’ users shared posts claiming the makers changed the names of the hijackers to ‘Shankar’ and ‘Bhola’ to allegedly protect the terrorists who belonged to a certain community.
A user accused Sinha of ‘deliberate distortion of facts’ as well as termed the series ‘propaganda’.
“It’s a vile attempt to rewrite history, downplay the terror inflicted by the actual hijackers and subtly glorify their actions. By reducing the tragedy of IC 814 to a farcical narrative, Sinha has shown where his loyalties lie - not with the victims or the truth, but with an insidious agenda that seeks to whitewash the brutality of terrorism and vilify the Hindu community,” she wrote on ‘X’.
Another wrote, “Names of IC814 hijackers changed to Shankar and Bhola by Anubhav Sinha. This is how Bollywood let the terrorists win.”
“IC 814 terrorist names - Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, Masood Azhar and Mushtaq Ahmed Zargar. In the movie - Shankar and Bhola!” read a post.
Chhabra, a prominent casting director in the industry, said that the terrorists used ‘nicknames or fake names’ to address each other.
“I am reading so many tweets about the names of the hijackers. We did the proper research. They used to call each other by those names - nicknames or fake names, whatever you want to call them. And thank you, everyone, for loving the ensemble cast. A big thank you to my team and especially to Anubhav Sinha for trusting us and giving me the freedom to explore,” he wrote on ‘X’.