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Indian group wants Queen Elizabeth II to return Koh-i-noor diamond

Updated on: 09 November,2015 02:00 PM IST  | 
Agencies |

A group of Indian businessmen and Bollywood actors in the UK is set to begin legal proceedings to force the UK government to return the diamond

Indian group wants Queen Elizabeth II to return Koh-i-noor diamond

Queen Elizabeth II

London: A lobby group made up of Indian businessmen and actors is mounting a legal challenge against Queen Elizabeth II, demanding the return of the Koh-i-noor diamond to India.


Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Elizabeth II


The 105-carat stone, believed to have been mined in India nearly 800 years ago, was presented to Queen Victoria during the British Raj in India and is now set in a crown belonging to the Queen’s mother on public display in the Tower of London.


David de Souza, co-founder of the Indian leisure group Titos, is helping to fund the new legal action and has instructed British lawyers to begin High Court proceedings.

Koh-i-noor was presented to Queen Victoria during the British Raj in India. It is now set in a crown belonging to the queen’s mother on public display in the Tower of London. Pics/AFP
Koh-i-noor was presented to Queen Victoria during the British Raj in India. It is now set in a crown belonging to the queen’s mother on public display in the Tower of London. Pics/AFP

“The Koh-i-Noor is one of the many artefacts taken from India under dubious circumstances. Colonisation did not only rob our people of wealth, it destroyed the country's psyche itself. It brutalised society, traces of which linger on today in the form of mass poverty, lack of education and a host of other factors,” De Souza said.

Modi’s UK visit
The legal action coincides with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the UK this week, which includes a lunch hosted by the queen at Buckingham Palace.

The campaign has found support in Britain with the likes of Labour party Indian-origin Labour MP Keith Vaz, who said, “What a wonderful moment it would be, if when PM Modi finishes his visit, he returns to India with promise of the diamond’s return.”

The British law firm instructed by the campaigners, calling themselves the Mountain of Light group, said that it would be basing its case on principles enshrined in British law that give institutions the power to return stolen art.

No returns!
The British government has previously rejected all demands for the return of Koh-i-Noor, and in 2013 British Prime Minister David Cameron while on a visit to India, defended Britain’s right to keep it saying he did not believe in “returnism”.

Bhumika Singh, a Bollywood actress backing the campaign, said, “Koh-i-Noor is not just a 105-carat piece of stone. It has a lot of history and culture attached to it, and it should be returned to India.”

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