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Supreme Court says OK for Gere to visit
India
Showbiz
Desk
NEW DELHI—Richard Gere is free to go back to India — and he may have a
new reason to book a trip. India’s top court suspended an arrest warrant
Friday against Gere, wanted for allegedly breaking public obscenity laws
by kissing Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty at a public AIDS awareness
event last year.
“Gere is allowed to come and leave. He can’t be arrested,” said Anil
Grover, an attorney for Shetty, after attending the Supreme Court
proceedings. Chief Justice K. G. Balakrishnan and Justice R. V.
Raveendran indefinitely stayed the arrest warrant issued against the
actor last year by a court in the northwestern Indian city of Jaipur,
Grover told media.
Gere embraced and kissed Shetty on her cheek at the public AIDS
awareness event in New Delhi on April 15 last year, prompting Hindu
hard-liners to allege the pair had offended the sensibilities of India’s
traditionally conservative culture. Hindu activists filed three cases
against Gere and Shetty last year, including one in Jaipur.
Shortly after the cases were filed by Hindu activists, Gere apologized
for any offence he may have caused, but he also said the whole
controversy was manufactured by a small hard-line political party. The
58-year-old Buddhist actor and longtime Tibetan supporter is a frequent
visitor to India, promoting health issues and the cause of Tibetan
exiles, tens of thousands of whom live in India.
As rioting erupted Friday in Tibet’s capital of Lhasa, Gere said the
protests led by Buddhist monks weren’t unexpected. “I’m saddened but I
can’t say I’m surprised,” the actor told The Associated Press in an
interview. “You can’t repress the people to the extent that Tibetans
have been repressed for the last six decades now and not expect that at
some point that it will explode.”
The official Xinhua News Agency said Saturday that seven people have
been confirmed dead in rioting. Eyewitness accounts and photos posted on
the Internet portrayed a chaotic scene in Lhasa, with crowds hurling
rocks at security forces, hotels and restaurants. The U.S. Embassy said
Americans had reported gunfire. “One would think that as China becomes
the country that they supposedly want to be — a world power, respected —
that in fact everything has tightened inside of Tibet,” he said. “The
lack of opportunities for Tibetans in general — the lack of education,
the destruction of culture and language, the inability to practice their
religion — these are the things that make people crazy. And Tibetans are
the most non-violent people on the planet. |