Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

TAJ MAHAL PART OF OUR HERITAGE, SAYS TOURISM MINISTER ALPHONS

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Taj Mahal is a part of India’s heritage and people are proud of it, Union tourism minister KJ Alphons said on Saturday, quoting Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s remarks earlier this week that a country cannot progress if it is not proud of its heritage.

The minister’s remarks came amid a political slugfest triggered by Sangeet Som, the controvers­ial Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MLA from Uttar Pradesh, after he described the 17th century monument as a “blot” on India’s culture because it was ordered built by emperor Shah Jahan who imprisoned his father.

That statement, denounced by opposition parties and public intellectu­als, was also incorrect because it was Shah Jahan who was imprisoned by his son Aurangzeb. A day later, senior BJP leeaaderde­r Vinay Katiyar waded into the controv saying the Taj was o nally a temple to Lo Shiva calledc the ‘Tej Mahal’.

“Thee hon’ble Pri Ministeer had the las word (ono this issue) He saidd we are ver proud ofo our heritage Taj is paart of our heri tage,” AlphonsA an intervie Hindust Times (HT).

“We have made it very clear that we are very proud of Taj. It’s a star tourist destinatio­n in India,” he said, refusing to get drawn into his party colleagues’ statements.

The Taj Mahal, one of the seven wonders of the world, is among India’s top tourist draws but has received a barrage of negative comments from senior BJP leaders, including Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath who said last June that the ivory-white marble mausoleum didn’t represent “Indian culture”.

Alphons, a bureaucrat­turned-politician who was inducted into the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government last month and given independen­t charge of the ministry of tourism, spoke on a range of issues.

He re-iterated the Central government’s stand to divest its shares from ITDC-run hotels, sayinging “the government has no ness to be in busiss”. The minister suggested that hotel Ashoka in the national capital might stay with the government.

“I guess Ashoka hotel (in he capital) cannot old for the

e rea- son that it is worth thousands of crores. I don’t think any hotel chain would be able to buy it. So, obviously, we would possibly keep that property. How we are going to run it is a different issue on which the Cabinet will take a call.

“We are in the process of divesting other hotels. We are not even calling it disinvestm­ent because in all the cases we are transferri­ng them back to the state government­s because the land belongs to them.” Alphons, however, added that no decision had yet been made.

Alphons spoke of the country’s heritage and philosophy that draw foreign tourists. Talking about the “variety” India offers in terms of art, music, textiles, and culinary, Alphons said, “If you go abroad, you find the food pretty boring, I mean in most countries. They have the same dishes- steak, steak and steak. In India, every district has its own huge culinary tradition.”

The minister, who had earlier said tourists could fulfil their desire to eat beef in their own country before coming to India, maintained that it was for each state to decide their eating or drinking habits. “Why should the government of India dictate it?”

Asked if demonetisa­tion had any bearing on the tourism sector, Alphons said, “As per our calculatio­n, domestic tourism has not really come down. People are travelling a lot. Their number is increasing at a very, very healthy rate.”

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Tourism minister Alphons K

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