NEW DELHI: Right-wing Hindu activists on Friday disrupted shooting for Oscar-winner Kathryn Bigelows movie on the hunt for Osama bin Laden, protesting the use of Indian locations to portray Pakistan.
Members of the hardline Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) stormed the set in Chandigarh, the northern Indian city famously designed by Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier, where Bigelows crew had been shooting for four days.
The location was a Chandigarh market, which the production company had transformed with shopboard signs in Urdu, rickshaws with Lahore number plates and burqa-clad extras.
They removed signs that had been put up in Urdu and also pushed and abused the camera crew. They raised slogans against Pakistan and forcibly removed some Pakistani flags, a local police officer told AFP by telephone.
We dont want Pakistani flags on Indian soil and we dont agree that Indian markets should look like Pakistan, said VHP secretary Ramkrishna Srivastava.
Under the working title Zero Dark Thirty, Bigelows latest film recounts the hunt for bin Laden, which ended when US special forces raided his hideout in the Pakistans garrison town of Abbottabad last May, killing the al Qaeda leader.
With filming in Pakistan not an option, there has been intense media speculation about what locations might be chosen by Bigelow, who won the 2010 Oscar for Best Director for The Hurt Locker.
Indian newspaper reports had suggested she might look to recreate the recently demolished three-storey bin Laden hideout in the desert state of Rajasthan.
The Indian line production company involved in the film said the shooting in Chandigarh was simply aimed at collecting establishing shots with a Pakistani feel.
No real sets have been built at all. The actual recreation of Abbottabad will not even be in India. Its being done in Jordan, said a member of the company who declined to be identified.
He said talks had been held with the Hindu protestors to try and defuse the situation.
We explained that theres nothing here against Hinduism, nothing against Pakistan. Its just a movie, he said.
Nothing has been shut down. We are still filming and will continue to do so, he added.
The film is scheduled to be released at the end of 2012.
Hindu protesters disrupt Bin Laden movie shoot in India The Express Tribune