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Panaji: Actor Jackie Shroff addressing a press conference at the 46th International Film Festival of India (IFFI-2015) in Panaji, Goa on Wednesday. PTI Photo(PTI11_25_2015_000236B) Image Credit: PTI

The International Film Festival of India (IFFI) campus is for cinema and not for politics, festival director C. Senthil Rajan said on Wednesday, rejecting charges made by protesting Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) students and sympathisers that they were being victimised.

Rajan defended his decision to drop the students’ film section from IFFI; he said it was done to accommodate repeat film screenings on public demand at the festival.

“They have not stopped any delegate or any film student who just came here to watch movies. Our objective is to showcase films. This is not a political arena or a protest arena for people to come in to protest.

“It is an arena for showcasing films. We have been very clear in that and we have not stopped anybody who wanted to come and enjoy films in the arena,” Rajan said, thanking Goa Police for their handling of FTII student protests.

FTII students had staged a 139-day strike from June 12 in protest of the appointment of Gajendra Chauhan as the institute’s chairman, claiming he was unfit for the position.

After the appointing authority, the union ministry for information and broadcasting, did not cancel Chauhan’s appointment, the students called off the strike, on October 29, but insisted that their protests would continue.

A spokesperson for the FTII students said more than two dozen students were denied registration for IFFI, two ex-students were arrested for protesting at the event’s launch, and one student was detained for several hours by the police for wearing a T-shirt with the FTII logo at the festival campus.

FTII sympathisers have also started a two-day parallel film festival, featuring films made by students, at a short distance from the venue of the international event.

Rajan also said that contrary to allegations made by FTII students and alumni, registration of an FTII student was cancelled in only one case; when a student threatened to disrupt the international event.

“The number of student delegates we have registered is four hundred and out of that we also have FTII students we have registered. Personally, we have cancelled only one registration of a student who has told the police that ‘I will come inside the venue and protest’,” Rajan said.

The festival director said an entire student film section in the festival’s programming had been sacrificed to accommodate repeat screenings of films as demanded by delegates.

“The media has been writing that we have dropped the FTII student package. We have not dropped FTII student film package, we have dropped the entire student film package, which actually comes from different film schools, not just FTII. It has been dropped only to accommodate IFFI repeats,” Rajan said.

“It’s not that we have sacrificed it [the section], it’s only an issue of taking the best,” he added.