Indian Home Minister
Rajnath Singh has promised an inquiry into how a TV crew gained
permission to interview one of the Delhi gang rapists on death row.
He criticised the film in parliament, saying it should not be
shown in India. A Delhi court has already blocked the film, made for
the BBC and NDTV. 
Film-maker Leslee Udwin said the jail and home ministry had given her permission to conduct the interview.
She spoke to one of four men sentenced to death over the 2012 rape and murder.
The killing of the 23-year-old student on a bus in Delhi caused shock and revulsion around the world.
Udwin interviewed one of the rapists for India's Daughter, a
BBC Storyville documentary due to be broadcast on 8 March, International
Women's Day.
Rapist Mukesh Singh, who along with the three others is
facing the death penalty, expressed no remorse in the interview, and
blamed the victim for fighting back.
'Atmosphere of tension'
Rajnath Singh told parliament that his government would "not
allow any venture that seeks to benefit from this [the Delhi rape] for
commercial gain".
He said the film-makers were asked not to release or screen it until it was approved by the Indian authorities.
Police in Delhi said they had gained an injunction against
the film because the rapist's remarks were "creating an atmosphere of
fear and tension".
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