India, April 6 -- If I hadn't been nominated for an Oscar or won a few national awards, you would not have been in this car interviewing me," says Ashvin Kumar emphatically. He is on his way to the airport after a whirlwind visit of Delhi where his latest film No Fathers in Kashmir was screened for a select audience. The director, whose previous offerings Inshallah Kashmir , Inshallah Football and Little Terrorist - all of which touched upon different aspects of human tragedy that afflict the northernmost state of India - does not believe in mincing words. Whether he is talking of the situation in Kashmir, the government of the day, the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC), Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) or even the apathy ...