Indian-born British politician says Koh-i-noor belongs to Pakistan

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Courtesy India Today

The Koh-e-Noor saga taken another interesting turn on Monday as Indian-born British politician said the coveted diamond actually belonged to Pakistan.

“If Koh-e-noor belongs to anybody, it belongs to Pakistan,” Lord Meghnad Desai said while speaking to India Today.

Referring to the 19th-century Sikh king Ranjit Singh, who had given the stone to the British, Lord Desai reasoned that since Singh’s seat was in Lahore, the diamond should go to Pakistan.

“Because his territory was mainly in, what is now Pakistan – in Lahore there is a Ranjit Singh museum – it will go back to wherever the Punjab kingdom had its seat and his seat was in Lahore. So I think if it belongs to anybody, it belongs to Pakistan,” he said.

Indian government said Tuesday that it will make all possible efforts to get back the Koh-e-Noor Diamond from Britain despite comments by New Delhi’s solicitor general that the priceless jewel should stay with the former colonial ruler.

India has repeatedly demanded that Britain return the 105-carat diamond, which was presented to Queen Victoria in 1850 and today sits on display as part of the Crown Jewels in the Tower of London.

Read more: India backtracks, says will now try to reclaim Koh-i-Noor from UK

India’s solicitor general surprised many on Monday when he told the Supreme Court that his country should forgo its claims to the jewel because it was given to Britain as a gift by an Indian king in 1851, rather than stolen as many Indians today believe.

The ministry said the stone was a “valued piece of art with strong roots in our nation’s history” and that Prime Minister Narendra Modi was determined to get it back.

A lawyer in Pakistan last year filed a court petition calling for the stone’s return.

The Koh-e-Noor is set in the crown worn by Queen Elizabeth, the mother of the reigning monarch, at the coronation of her husband George VI in 1937, and was placed on her coffin at her funeral in 2002.

The Duchess of Cambridge, who last week visited India with her husband, Prince William, will wear the crown on official occasions when she becomes queen consort. William is second in line to the British throne.

Read more: India says Koh-i-Noor diamond belongs to Britain

 

4 COMMENTS

  1. LOL! Just for the argument sake he has said something bizarre.
    To defeat the whole issue of Indians expediting there rights on Kh-e-noor he dragged Pak… LOL
    He is actually of the opinion that it should remain with the Queen as he has his tongue way up Queen's u know where :).
    Rathar than saying what he really wants, he is using the old divide-rule strategy to diffuse the issue.
    It's not 1945 dude grow up.

  2. Kohinoor was originally mined from the Kollur (Guntur Distt) diamond mines in Andhra Pradesh during the haydays of Golkonda Nawabs who appropriated it for long years. But Telugu people consider it an unlucky diamond because who ever possessed it had historically lost whatever they had.

  3. Actually the very name of the diamond Koh-i-noor (Mount of light) is a persianised form of Kollur.

  4. Now we have already grown our new generation are very clever the time is going so fast that we are doing more research.
    Now listen if it was all india and the kohinoor was in east-india what is now Pakistan And then ranjeet singh gaves kohinoor to britain
    and ranjeet was in lahore that him real place where he lives not in india and now we are seprated so the kohinoor belongs to pakistan,lahore.
    do you understood.

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