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India still wants the UK to give the Kohinoor diamond back

Апрель 20, 2016     Автор: Ольга Хмельная
India still wants the UK to give the Kohinoor diamond back

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The Indian government is making "all possible efforts" to retrieve the Kohinoor diamond contrary to reported comments from the country's Solicitor General that the rare historical stone was given as a gift to the United Kingdom and not stolen.

Media reports said Solicitor General Ranjit Kumar told the Indian Supreme Court that the diamond was "neither stolen nor forcibly taken" but had been "gifted" to the East India Company by Punjab rulers.

The country's highest court is deciding on the issue after an Indian NGO filed a petition asking the court to bid for the diamond's return.

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Mountain of light

The legendary 105.6 carat diamond, whose name means "mountain of light", is set in the Queen Mother's crown on display in the Tower of London. It has been the source of a decades-long controversy with claims not just from India but Pakistan too.

The Kohinoor was unearthed in the Golconda mines in central southern India, according to the UK Royal Palace, and passed through the possession of "Mughal princes, Iranian warriors, Afghan rulers and Punjabi Maharajas" before ending up in British hands in 1849.

It was removed from its Indian setting and recut in 1852 as an oval brilliant.

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'Bring back the Kohinoor'

A statement from the Indian Ministry of Culture on Tuesday said that the Solicitor General's views were not those of the Indian government and it "reiterated its resolve to make all possible efforts to bring back the Kohinoor Diamond in an amicable manner."

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