India to go all out for 106-carat Kohinoor diamond

Sikhs jump into fray, say diamond belongs to them.

Update: 2016-07-31 19:43 GMT
Kohinoor, which means Mountain of Light, is a large, colourless diamond that was found in Southern India in early 14th century. (Photo: AFP)

New Delhi: India will make all-out efforts to get back the famed 106-carat Kohinoor despite the British government’s recent statement that there is no legal ground for restitution of the diamond.

With an estimated value of over Rs 200 million, Kohinoor was transferred to the treasury of the British East India Company in Lahore after the subjugation of Punjab in 1849 by the British forces, which had confiscated the properties of the Sikh Empire.

“The government is considering both diplomatic as well as legal channels. If India is able to get back the diamond through diplomatic efforts, then it would not go for the legal channel. But if that does not fructify, then the government will explore legal option,” a government source said.

The move comes against the backdrop of the UK minister of Asia and Pacific affairs Alok Sharma indicating that Kohinoor could probably never find its way to India. “As far as this issue is concerned, there is no legal ground for restitution,” he had said during his visit here last week.

Shiromani Gurdwara Prabankdhak Committee (SGPC), which represents the Sikh community, has also jumped into the fray to stake claim over the precious gem.

Kohinoor case is in apex court
India will make all-out efforts to get back the famed 106-carat Kohinoor even as SGPC chief secretary Harcharan Singh has urged the Centre to take up the matter with British government and demand its return to the Sikh community.

Punjab Cabinet minister Daljit Singh Cheema has also said the state has the “legitimate right” over the diamond and claimed that it was taken away in a “deceitful” manner by the British from Maharaja Duleep Singh who was last Sikh ruler of Punjab.

As political pressure mounts on government to bring back the diamond, which also is an emotive issue, culture minister Mahesh Sharma had a meeting with external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj recently where it was reportedly decided that India would approach Britain next month on the issue of bringing it back.

The SC is hearing a case seeking Kohinoor’s return and the meeting had also deliberated on stand to be taken by the government before the apex court.

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