Can't order UK to return Kohinoor: SC

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Refusing to monitor efforts for getting the Kohinoor back to from the United Kingdom, the Supreme on Friday said the cannot order the diamond's return or say that the should not auction it.

"We are quite surprised as to how an Indian can pass an order to bring something which is in the UK," a bench of Chief Justice Jagdish Singh Khehar, Justice D.Y. Chandrachud and Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul said while dismissing a public interest litigation filed by All Human Rights and Social Justice Front.

"Can we say England should not auction some property," the bench asked and refused the plea for the to monitor diplomatic efforts made by the Centre to ensure the return of the diamond now studded in the British crown.

The can't monitor diplomatic efforts, the bench said as the petitioner-NGO said that the should monitor government's diplomatic efforts to get back the diamond.

On May 9, 2016, the told the Lok Sabha that the External Affairs Ministry was exploring ways to ensure a satisfactory resolution to the vexed Kohinoor issue with the British

Disposing of the petitions filed by All Human Rights and Social Justice Front as well as Heritage Bengal, the apex said it was satisfied with the government's response that it was making efforts to get the diamond back.

Initially the Centre took the position that the British East Company did not take away the Kohinoor diamond but it was gifted to Britain by Maharaja Duleep Singh. Later, the said it will take steps to bring back the diamond in an "amicable manner".

The shift in the Centre's stand came after the Supreme on April 18, 2016, said that if the apex accepted the position that the diamond was gifted to Britain and dismissed the PIL, all future avenues for staking any legitimate claim over the Kohinoor will be shut.

The 108-carat Kohinoor, adorning the British monarch's crown, is kept under tight security at the Tower of London.

It was presented to the then British monarch, Queen Victoria, in 1850 after the Anglo-Sikh wars, in which Britain gained control over the Sikh Empire in the then undivided Punjab.

--IANS

pk/tsb/dg

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Can't order UK to return Kohinoor: SC

Refusing to monitor government efforts for getting the Kohinoor back to India from the United Kingdom, the Supreme Court on Friday said the court cannot order the diamond's return or say that the UK should not auction it.

Refusing to monitor efforts for getting the Kohinoor back to from the United Kingdom, the Supreme on Friday said the cannot order the diamond's return or say that the should not auction it.

"We are quite surprised as to how an Indian can pass an order to bring something which is in the UK," a bench of Chief Justice Jagdish Singh Khehar, Justice D.Y. Chandrachud and Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul said while dismissing a public interest litigation filed by All Human Rights and Social Justice Front.

"Can we say England should not auction some property," the bench asked and refused the plea for the to monitor diplomatic efforts made by the Centre to ensure the return of the diamond now studded in the British crown.

The can't monitor diplomatic efforts, the bench said as the petitioner-NGO said that the should monitor government's diplomatic efforts to get back the diamond.

On May 9, 2016, the told the Lok Sabha that the External Affairs Ministry was exploring ways to ensure a satisfactory resolution to the vexed Kohinoor issue with the British

Disposing of the petitions filed by All Human Rights and Social Justice Front as well as Heritage Bengal, the apex said it was satisfied with the government's response that it was making efforts to get the diamond back.

Initially the Centre took the position that the British East Company did not take away the Kohinoor diamond but it was gifted to Britain by Maharaja Duleep Singh. Later, the said it will take steps to bring back the diamond in an "amicable manner".

The shift in the Centre's stand came after the Supreme on April 18, 2016, said that if the apex accepted the position that the diamond was gifted to Britain and dismissed the PIL, all future avenues for staking any legitimate claim over the Kohinoor will be shut.

The 108-carat Kohinoor, adorning the British monarch's crown, is kept under tight security at the Tower of London.

It was presented to the then British monarch, Queen Victoria, in 1850 after the Anglo-Sikh wars, in which Britain gained control over the Sikh Empire in the then undivided Punjab.

--IANS

pk/tsb/dg

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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