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This Article is From Aug 28, 2015

Phantom Being Taken to Court by Medical Charity Over Gun-Toting Katrina

<i>Phantom</i> Being Taken to Court by Medical Charity Over Gun-Toting Katrina
Katrina Kaif in a still from Phantom.
New Delhi: International charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) is taking legal action against the producers of recently released film Phantom, saying its misrepresentation of the medical group could put its aid workers deployed in conflict zones at risk.

Action-thriller film Phantom features actress Katrina Kaif as an MSF aid worker who helps a disgraced soldier, played by actor Saif Ali Khan, to assassinate Pakistani militants accused of being behind the 2008 Mumbai bombings. (Movie Review: Phantom)

In promotional interviews for the film, Katrina was quoted as saying, "NGO workers have ties with local fanatical groups" in war-torn regions, without mentioning that many aid groups maintain strict neutrality in order to do their work safely.

In the film's trailer, her character is seen firing a pistol and rifle in two different scenes.

MSF said it had not been consulted over the content of the film and was not associated with it in any way. The humanitarian agency had "a strict no guns policy" in all its clinics and did not employ armed guards, it added.

"None of our staff would ever carry a gun. Any portrayal that suggests otherwise is dangerous, misleading and wrong," MSF said in a statement.

"We have contacted the film's production team and are taking legal action in order to correct this dangerous misrepresentation of our organisation and its work." (Also Read - It Was Expected: Saif on Phantom Ban in Pakistan)

The film's director Kabir Khan and producers Sajid Nadiadwala and Siddharth Roy Kapur could not immediately be reached for comment.

Phantom was banned by a Pakistani court last week in response to a petition filed by Hafiz Saeed, the man India accuses of masterminding the killing of 166 people over three days in November 2008.

Hafiz Saeed, the founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba which the United Nations has listed as a terrorist organisation, said the film whose main villain is a man called "Hariz Saeed" maligns Pakistan and vilifies him. (Also Read: Actor Playing Hafiz Saeed in Phantom Goes Underground)

MSF - which has thousands of health workers such as doctors, nurses, surgeons, anaesthetists and psychiatrists in more than 70 countries - said it was essential that the group was not misrepresented given the dangerous nature of their work.

"The only way we can safely work in places such as Syria, Afghanistan and Yemen, where there is active fighting, is by explaining to every group on the ground that we are independent, neutral and impartial and interested only in providing medical care to people who need it," MSF said.

"Any portrayal that suggests MSF does anything other than provide medical care could endanger our patients, staff, our ability to work in places where people might not otherwise have access to healthcare and undermine our reputation."

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