Since the passing of Queen Elizabeth last week, the internet has been having multiple field days with one demand -- Return the Kohinoor diamond to India.While most of these claims are for kicks, one organisation - Shree Jagannath Sena - is laying a serious claim.?
Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, her son Prince Charles has become the King and, as per norms, the 105-carat diamond will go to his wife the Duchess of Cornwall Camilla, who is the Queen consort.
But Shree Jagannath Sena, a Puri-based outfit, has submitted a memorandum to the President, seeking her intervention to facilitate the process of bringing back the Kohinoor diamond to the 12th-century shrine.
"The Kohinoor diamond belongs to Sri Jagannath Bhagban. It is now with the Queen of England. Kindly request our Prime Minister to take steps to bring it to India... as Maharaja Ranjit Singh donated it to God Jagannath in his will," Sena convener Priya Darsan Pattnaik said in the memorandum.
Pattnaik claims that the gem was handed over by Maharaja of Punjab Ranjit Singh to the temple after he won against Nadir Shah of Afghanistan.
However, it was not handed over immediately. Ranjit Singh died in 1839 and, 10 years later, the British took the Kohinoor away from his son, Duleep Singh, though they were aware that it was bequeathed to Lord Jagannath at Puri, historian and researcher Anil Dhir told PTI.
In 2016, the organisation wrote to the Queen directly on the matter, asking for the diamond back.?In return,?Buckingham Palace on October 19, 2016?responded, saying "Her Majesty acts on the advice of her ministers and remains strictly non-political at all times," asking him to approach government officials instead.
A copy of that letter has been attached to the memorandum to the President, he said.Asked why he was silent on the issue for six years, Pattnaik said he was denied a Visa to visit England due to which he could not take up the matter further with the UK government.
Sena's claim is justified though there are several claimants like Maharaja Ranjit Singh's heirs, Pakistan and Afghanistan, Dhir said."Maharaja Ranjit Singh's will before his death stated that he donated the Kohinoor to Lord Jagannath. The document was certified by a British Army officer, the proof of which is available at the National Archives in Delhi," said the historian.
The Kohinoor diamond was "surrendered" by the Maharaja of Lahore to the then Queen of England and "not handed over" to the British nearly 170 years ago, the Archaeological Survey of India replied to an RTI query a few years ago.
The Indian government's stand in the Supreme Court was that the diamond, estimated to cost over USD 200 million, was neither stolen nor "forcibly" taken by British rulers, but given to the East India Company by erstwhile rulers of Punjab.
Considered to be one of the world's most precious gems, the Kohinoor was reportedly found in India in the 14th century during coal mining in the Kollur mine in South India.
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