Today's News | News of Jan
18, 2007 No Racist
Slurs, Shilpa Now Says By Prasun
Sonwalkar in London and Manish Chand in New Delhi
London/New Delhi, Jan 18
Bollywood actor Shilpa Shetty Thursday moved to defuse a ballooning
row over alleged racist slurs against her in a British TV reality
show by saying nothing of the sort happened, even as the future of
the show hung in the balance after its main sponsor withdrew.
"I don't feel that there was any racial discrimination," a highly
emotional Shetty said on Channel 4, which had broadcast an episode
of the Celebrity Big Brother show in which some of the participants
seemed to be racially taunting the leggy actor.
This was a clear retraction from an earlier statement Wednesday in
which Shetty, the first Indian actor to participate in the popular
Channel 4 show, maintained she was racially targeted.
"I think there are a lot of insecurities in (show participant Jade
Goody) but that's not racial," Shetty maintained.
"I take that back," she said of her earlier statement.
"I don't like the way she speaks - that's my only complaint against
Jade. She does need to brush up on her manners."
Celebrity Big Brother had drawn unprecedented viewership after a
controversy exploded over alleged racist slurs and became a
diplomatic issue.
Carphone Warehouse suspended sponsorship of the show, saying this
would be removed from the current series "with immediate effect".
The move follows Britain's media watchdog Ofcom's demand that the
channel must respond to complaints of racist remarks against the
Bollywood star.
A record 30,000 complaints were made over the alleged racist
comments as the viewership of the programme crossed six million
mark.
The controversy had deepened further with the long-legged Indian
beauty herself saying that she indeed was a victim of racial abuse
even as British leader Gordon Brown, on his first visit to India,
called the much-publicised slurs "unacceptable".
"This is unacceptable. Thousands of British people have already
condemned it," British Chancellor of the Exchequer Brown, the
Labour's prime minister-in-waiting, told reporters in New Delhi.
"India and Britain are bound by shared values that support fairness
and tolerance. We are against any form of racism or intolerance,"
Brown stressed at a joint press conference in New Delhi with Indian
Finance Minister P. Chidambaram.
"There is no strain on ties between the governments of Britain and
India. Nor is there any strain between the people of India and
Britain," Chidambaram said after launching the India-UK economic and
financial dialogue.
"We hope that the universal condemnation will bring out a change in
behaviour. I am pleased to say British Prime Minister Tony Blair has
condemned it," said Chidambaram, trying to downplay the potential of
the incident to dent bilateral ties.
"The only thing is that this show allows bad behaviour to be
advertised. It will pass," he said in a lighter vein.
In London, Channel 4 initially claimed that Shetty herself had not
alleged racism, but Shilpa had maintained she believed that she was
indeed facing racism from others, even as she was unaware that the
race row has developed into an international issue.
Celebrity Big Brother housemates Wednesday had an argument over
stock cubes. After the spat, housemate Cleo Rocos told Shetty: "I
don't think there's anything racist in it." Shilpa replied: "It is,
I'm telling you."
The viewership for Wednesday was over a million more than that
recorded for Tuesday night as allegations of racism against Shetty
figured not only high on the agenda of diplomacy between India and
Britain and hogged international headlines.
On the reality show, Shilpa was said to have been targeted by some
housemates because she is Indian and has been derided for her
background and even her cooking.
Big Brother housemates Jade Goody, Danielle Lloyd and Jo O'Meara
seemed to have ganged up against her in the past few days. She had
become the subject of snide and biting remarks because of her
hauteur and popularity as the heartthrob of millions of Bollywood
fans, it was alleged.
Shetty's housemates have often referred to her as 'the Indian', and
some have found it difficult to pronounce her name, poked fun at her
accent and asked her if she lived in a shack.
After Blair, Brown and others intervened to express their opposition
to racism in all forms, Conservative leader David Cameron said: "I
completely abhor racism. Everyone has got a responsibility here.
There's a great regulator called the off button and I think we
should use it."
In large sections of the British media, Brown's comments on Shetty
were given more prominence than his speech on globalisation and
economic issues in Bangalore Wednesday. Television news channels
provided back-to-back coverage of the Shetty show, including
exclusive interviews with her mother in Mumbai.
Television regulator Ofcom and Channel 4 have now received over
30,000 complaints, as British Asian websites, chat rooms and radio
stations continue to buzz with indignation over the treatment meted
out to the long-legged stunner from Bollywood.
William Hill bookmaker made Shetty favourite to win the series, at
odds of 6/4. "She has stuck in there and if she now picks up the
public sympathy vote, punters certainly believe she will be very
hard to beat," it said.
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