Times Colonist

Court takes issue with Taj Mahal going green

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NEW DELHI — The Taj Mahal, that shining white monument to love, is turning a little … green. And yellow. And black.

And India’s Supreme Court is not pleased.

“You all appear to be helpless,” a Supreme Court judge told government officials this week, after an environmen­tal lawyer argued that pollution and insect dung were discolouri­ng the 17th-century building.

“Money should not be the considerat­ion. We might order you to hire experts from within India or abroad. We need to save it,” the judge said, according to numerous Indian media reports. The reports did not give the judge’s name.

The officials, representi­ng the central government and Uttar Pradesh state, where the Taj is located, were given until Wednesday to come up with a plan and report back to the court.

Built by Mogul Emperor Shah Jahan for his favourite wife in the north Indian city of Agra, the monument has been losing its sheen for years. The Archeologi­cal Survey of India, the agency responsibl­e for preserving the country’s monuments, has been coating portions of the Taj with a special clay that, when it is removed, also takes away most discoloura­tions.

But M.C. Mehta, the lawyer who brought the case to the court, said not enough is being done.

“The white sheen is disappeari­ng and instead of that if the green colour, the brown colour, the other colours … are visible, then what is the reason? The reason is that the pollution has become alarming,” he said after the hearing.

One of the world’s most famous tourist attraction­s, the Taj Mahal includes a mosque and the graves of the emperor and his wife, Mumtaz Mahal.

Agra is a major north Indian industrial centre, and the city is often covered with a fog of pollution. Experts say air pollution and swarms of breeding insects are threatenin­g the Taj by leaving green, yellow and black patches.

Mehta said authoritie­s have not complied with earlier Supreme Court orders to protect the Taj by shutting down area factories.

 ??  ?? The Taj Mahal, in Agra, India, is one of the world’s most famous tourist attraction­s. India’s top court has ordered officials to create a plan to ensure it is properly cared for — and cleaned.
The Taj Mahal, in Agra, India, is one of the world’s most famous tourist attraction­s. India’s top court has ordered officials to create a plan to ensure it is properly cared for — and cleaned.

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