"It is our priority to maintain peace and communal harmony in the state... We don't want that the movie should vitiate the communal atmosphere of the state," he told reporters here after paying homage to Akali stalwart, the late Jathedar Gurcharan Singh Tohra on his 9th death anniversary.
A day before its release, the Chandigarh administration, Punjab and Haryana government banned the film yesterday as it is understood to have glorified the Khalistan (separate Sikh homeland) movement and its leaders.
Punjab had witnessed great turbulence during the period in question and many police officers, including Punjab DGP Sumedh Singh Saini, are facing charges for crimes such as torture, murder/extra-judicial killings.
Meanwhile, in Amritsar, radical Sikh outfit Dal Khalsa condemned the Punjab government for banning the film on "frivolous charges" and demanded a rethink on the move.
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H S Dhami, the Dal Khalsa chief, alleged that the Akali led Punjab government had suppressed "the right to expression" by banning the film in the state after coming under pressure from the bureaucracy.
"By banning the film, the Punjab government has belittled the SGPC and Sikh institutions," Dhami charged.
He said that instead of serving it as a "lame duck" and helpless leader, SGPC chief Jathedar Avtar Singh Makkar should quit the post in protest against the ban.
Noting that the Censor Board and SGPC had given their go-ahead for the film, Dhami said that those against its screening were driven by a "communal mindset".
It is learnt that protests were held against the film at Phagwara and Hoshiarpur today.