The Asian Age

Pak court accepts Koh- i- Noor plea

Lahore high court Justice Khalid Mahmood Khan overruled the objection by the court’s registrar office to the petition which has named Queen Elizabeth II and British high commission in Pakistan respondent­s in the case

- M. ZULQERNAIN

A Pakistani court has accepted a petition seeking direction to the government to bring back Koh- i- Noor from British Queen Elizabeth- II, overruling the objection to the plea for the famed diamond, which India has been trying to get from the UK for years.

Lahore high court Justice Khalid Mahmood Khan on Monday overruled the objection by the court’s registrar office to the petition which has named Queen Elizabeth II and British high commission in Pakistan respondent­s in the case.

The plea filed by barrister Javed Iqbal Jaffry made Pakistan’s claim over the 105- carat gem on the basis that it hailed from the territory that became Pakistan in 1947.

The court directed the office to fix the petition before any appropriat­e bench for hearing. In December 2015, the registrar office’s had dismissed the plea terming it as nonmaintai­nable and said that the court had no jurisdicti­on to hear the case against the British queen. The petitioner filed a fresh applicatio­n in the high court pleading that in Britain the queen is respondent in every case. “Why not she can be made respondent in a case in Pakistan,” he argued in the court.

In the petition, Jaffry argued that Britain “forcibly and under duress” stole the diamond from Duleep Singh, grandson of Maharaja Ranjeet Singh, and took it to Britain. “The diamond became part of the crown of incumbent Queen Elizabeth II at the time of

her crowing in 1953. Queen Elizabeth has no right on the Koh- i- Noor diamond,” he said.

The London- trained lawyer said that he has written 786 letters to the queen and to Pakistani officials before filing the lawsuit. “Koh- i- Noor was not legitimate­ly acquired. Grabbing and snatching it was a private, illegal act which is justified by no law or ethics. A wrong is a wrong. It does not become righteous or right by passage of time or even acquiescen­ce,” he said in the petition. Claiming that the diamond was cultural heritage of Punjab province and its citizens owned it in fact, he sought direction to the government to bring the diamond back to Pakistan from the UK. The Koh- i- Noor is one of the crown jewels and is now on display in the Tower of London. India has made regular requests for the jewel’s return, saying the diamond is an integral part of the country’s history and culture.

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