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          .Mumbai, Aug 6 (IANS) Filmmaker Prakash Jha, whose Mumbai   residence and office were ransacked by activists of Republican Party of India   (RPI) Saturday, confirmed that nobody got hurt and said he failed to understand   the brouhaha over the release of his film "Aarakshan", based on caste-based   reservation in the Indian education system.
 
 |  "The censor board (Central Board of Film Certification) has cleared the film   without a single cut and with a U/A certificate. I am confident my film has   examined the issue of reservation and caste divides with sensitivity. I don't   understand why is everybody up in arms against my film. However, it's a   democratic country, so everyone has a right to protest," he added.
 "The   police have been very helpful in taking care of my office premises and dealing   with the violent protests happening there. Nobody from my office has been hurt.   And I'm very grateful for that," Jha said in a statement.
 
 The attack   started around 5.30 p.m., according to Jha, who is currently in the capital, and   will fly to Mumbai Sunday morning.
 
 RPI chief Ramdas Athavale earlier said   that his party would obstruct the release of the socio-political theme-based   movie in Maharashtra if Jha did not change its "anti-Dalit" stance.
 
 The   National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC) had also termed the film   "anti-Dalit", and asked Jha to screen the film for it before   release.
 
 Talking about the protests, Jha said: "The RPI activists have   been protesting outside my office. They have burnt photographs of me and posters   of the film. They have also been trying to damage our publicity material and   hoardings across the city."
 
 The movie, which features Amitabh Bachchan,   Saif Ali Khan, Deepika Padukone, Manoj Bajpayee and Prateik Babbar, is set to   hit screens Aug 12.
 
 But the 59-year-old filmmaker, known for his knack of   picking sensitive social issues as subjects for his projects, said people should   stop assuming the content of the film.
 
 "The fact of the matter is that   they have not seen the film. They are attacking me on the basis of presumptions   and misconceptions about the treatment of the caste issue in 'Aarakshan'. I am a   law-abiding and responsible citizen and filmmaker. I feel it's only fair if my   film is judged after it has released," he said.
 
 
 
 
      
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