Thursday, April 27, 2017

Supreme Court rejects plea to bring back Kohinoor Diamond



New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Friday said it cannot pass an order to the United Kingdom for reclaiming the Kohinoor Diamond or stop it from being auctioned.
The verdict comes after a plea was filed seeking directions to bring back the priceless diamond to India. However, a bench headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar said it is impossible for the country to ask a foreign government to not auction a property.
Disposing of a plea seeking directions to bring back the treasured diamond to India, a bench headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar said it cannot ask a foreign government not to auction a property.
The court made it clear it could not pass an order with regard to a property which was in another country.
"We are quite surprised that such petitions are filed for properties which are in the USA and the UK. What kind of a writ petition is this," the bench, also comprising Justices D Y Chandrachud and S K Kaul, commented.
The apex court referred to an affidavit filed by the Centre and said: "the Government of India continues to explore ways and means with the UK government on the issue."
The petitions, filed by an NGO, the All India Human Rights and Social Justice Front, and Heritage Bengal, a registered organisation, were tagged together by the court last year.
The pleas had said "India won independence in 1947. But successive governments at the Centre have made little or no attempt to bring back the Kohinoor diamond from the United Kingdom to India, the place of its origin."
"Whenever issues have been raised, central governments maintained on the floor of Parliament or in reply to RTI queries that Kohinoor is an Indian artifact but claims for repatriation thereof cannot be made for the same is not covered by the UNESCO Convention, 1972. "The lackadaisical approach of successive Governments in making positive and meaningful diplomatic parleys has not been in the national interest. All attempts on the part of the petitioners and other right-thinking persons to activate the Central Government have failed," they had said.
The Centre had earlier told the Supreme Court that Kohinoor was neither "forcibly taken", nor "stolen" by British rulers but given to the East India Company by the rulers of Punjab.

The Kohinoor was neither "forcibly taken", nor "stolen" by British rulers but given to them.

Does this seem like a fair judgment?

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