Pakistani film ' Jaago Hua Savera ' has been halted from getting screened at the Mumbai Academy of Moving Image ( MAMI ) festival. This comes after an NGO named Sangharsh Foundation objected its screening in the wake of the Uri attack . The organisation's president Prithvi Mhaske has sought police permission to protest against the organisers for the same.Speaking to Times Now he said, ''It is unfair that our soldiers die in the front and we watch Pakistani movies in air-conditioning theatres. We are all standing by the soldiers at such sensitive times.''Ashok Pandit, a member of the Central Board of Film Certification, reacting to the saga, said, ''I am very happy with the banning, this is a good sign. No Pakistani films will ever be screened in our land.''In contrast to these reactions, filmmaker Vivek Agnihotri took a different stand. ''I am totally against the ban though I understand the circumstances under which they were taken. The only way to hit them back is culturally.''A letter addressed to the film festival organisers said, "The organisers of this event are more likely to flare the outrage among people by screening this Pakistani film in their film festival. This will just not be acceptable as it will give rise to more tension and outrage among the people."The letter continued, "Moreover, IMPAA has also decided to ban Pakistani actors from working in Bollywood and also almost all single screen theatres have decided to ban movies of Pakistani actors. So, why the organisers of MAMI Mumbai Festival are pouring so much love towards the Pakistani actors."Meanwhile, the members of MAMI have released an official statement declaring that the Pakistani classic will not be screened as a part of the film festival's schedule.The statement read, "Given the current situation, the Jio MAMI 18th Mumbai Film Festival with Star has decided not to programme 'Jago Hua Savera' as part of the Restored Classics Section."'Jago Hua Savera' is a 1959 movie, which was made in then-East Pakistan (present-day Bangladesh) and was Pakistan's official entry to the 1960 Oscars. The bilingual movie revolves around a village of fishermen and their simple aspiration - every fisherman dreams of having his own boat someday.