India forbids the BBC's Modi film, "Ghosts of Gujarat"

The 2002 Gujarat riots are the subject of a BBC documentary that sparks a media frenzy in India. Additionally, the labor movement vs. the UK press.
It has become its own story that the Indian government decided to forbid a BBC documentary about Prime Minister Narendra Modi's involvement in the 2002 Gujarat riots, which resulted in more than a thousand fatalities.
It has brought Modi's record in government and the ensuing decrease in media freedom in the biggest democracy in the world to the attention of the entire world.
According to Open Democracy and the Financial Times' investigations, Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of the Wagner mercenary group and one of Vladimir Putin's most important allies, received legal assistance from London libel lawyers to pursue his targets in British courts, including journalists. Tariq Nafi, the producer, walks us through the results.
A wave of work stoppages has brought trade unions and the media's coverage of them into the public eye as the UK is in a state of political chaos. Mick Lynch, one particular union leader, has changed the narrative and put media on the defensive for their customarily anti-union stance. Daniel Turi examines how labor-related topics are covered in the British media.