The Sunday Guardian

Jammu’s Buddhist sites suffer from ASI’s apathy, villagers’ ire

Most archeologi­sts in J&K believe that a hitherto unknown civilisati­on is buried under the Ambran site.

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around the site are opposed to excavation.

“We could get a huge tourist flow from South East Asia, especially Myanmar and Japan, if the entire Buddhist circuit of J&K comes on the tourism map,” Zahoor Ahmed, deputy director of tourism, lamented while talking to The Sunday Guardian.

The reluctance of the political class to take on the villagers was cited as a reason for the delay. “We could not explore the site (at Ambran) as the land around the site is owned by the villagers. There is a lot of political pressure and as of today we have dropped the idea,” a senior official of the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI) told this newspaper, hinting at the role played by those in power.

However, the villagers retorted that the ASI is concocting stories of villagers’ resistance to hide its failure. “They should give us compensato­ry land and we will have no issues after that. They promised us alternativ­e land, but it was never given,” said Satpal Sharma, a resident of Ambran village.

Many archaeolog­ists in J&K believe that a hitherto unknown civilisati­on is buried under the Ambran site, with its roots linked to the Harappan civilisati­on.

The ASI team, during the excavation in the year 2000, had found artifacts of the Kushan period belonging to the eighth century. They discovered a stupa and rooms for monks at the site. The state government is clueless about any dispute between the ASI and the villagers. “I have not been informed about any such dispute and I will check if we have to provide alternativ­e land to the villagers,” a senior administra­tive official told this newspaper from Jammu.

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