Renuka Vyavahare (BOMBAY TIMES; March 31, 2020)

Filmmaker Sudhir Mishra is not amused. A video that was circulated on WhatsApp yesterday, claimed that the senior filmmaker was the man in it, who was hit with lathis by police personnel for stepping out during the nationwide lockdown implemented to counter the Coronavirus outbreak. Mishra was bombarded with phone calls to check if he was the man in the video. Talking to BT, he said, “Why would I flout rules and wander around on the roads during a lockdown? No other person in that video is being hit barring this particular man, so he must have said something. This guy doesn’t look anything like me, and I am not him.”

Mishra added, “I am currently with my parents at our Aaram Nagar cottage (Andheri). They are in their 80s, so I won’t do anything to put their lives in danger. In fact, I haven’t stepped out of my house in the last 13 days. I don’t need to step out as I have people, who help me out. Even when it comes to essential stuff, I have people who leave them at my doorstep. We wash those purchased items outside our home, before bringing them in. People need to be careful before they forward such videos. Unkeliye timepass hai shayad.”
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After social media mistakes man being manhandled by cops for director Sudhir Mishra, mid-day tracks down the real Versova resident who narrates his incident of police brutality
Mohar Basu (MID-DAY; March 31, 2020)

In an evidently despicable instance of police resorting to violent measures to enforce lockdown, a video of a man being manhandled by the cops outside a suburban supermarket went viral on social media over the weekend. When netizens mistakenly assumed that the man in question was Sudhir Mishra, the filmmaker denied the claim with a sharp reply: "Every tall white-haired guy is not me."

After a bit of digging, mid-day discovered that the man at the centre of the incident is Versova resident Manmohan Gill. "Yaar, utna damm nahi tha unke dande mein [the blows weren't that hard]," he chuckled when we reached out to him. Revealing that he had joined the queue outside Versova D-Mart, he shared, "When I realised I had joined the queue midway, I headed towards the end of the line. There were two male and two female cops. I happened to touch their bike, and they looked at me strangely. So, I took off my mask and asked them where I could find one of the products that was on my [groceries] list. That was the trigger, and they came at me, shouting, 'Hum 12 din se duty kar rahe hai yahan'. It's not easy being out there, but I had done nothing to deserve it."

Despite the violent episode, he has empathy for the men in khaki who are doing their duty. "I received calls from my cop friends assuring me that due action will be taken. But I don't want that because there is way too much pressure on them. Everyone needs to be kinder."

Meanwhile, Mishra was irked by the apathy displayed by netizens. "This attitude of hatred makes people stupid. The trolls are so devoid of empathy that a man is getting needlessly beaten up and they are deriving pleasure from it."

When mid-day contacted the officers at Versova police station, they refused to comment claiming that they had not watched the video yet.