India may approach Britain on bringing back Kohinoor

Update: 2016-07-23 22:44 GMT
The government is likely to approach Britain soon to get back the famed Kohinoor, one of the world’s largest diamonds, which is currently set in a royal crown on display in the Tower of London.

The decision was taken at a high-level meeting on Friday, which was attended by External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma and Cabinet Secretary PK Sinha, among others, sources said, adding that Britain might be approached on the issue next month.

The meeting also discussed possibility of signing a treaty with the UK, wherein Britain may be assured that India would not claim any other artefacts that are lying in the museums in that country except the Kohinoor, they said.

The meeting, that lasted for over 45 minutes, was called following Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s direction to take steps to bring back the 108-carat precious gem from the UK, they said. The Supreme Court is hearing a case, relating to the issue of bringing back the Kohinoor, and the meeting deliberated on stand to be taken by the government before the Apex Court. The court had asked the government whether it was willing to stake a claim on the Kohinoor.

In 2010, the then UK Prime Minister David Cameron, during a visit to India, had reportedly said that if Britain agrees to return the diamond, “you  suddenly find the British Museum empty.”  The sources said the government will further deliberate on how to bring back the diamond.

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