Khaleej Times

Restore Taj or demolish it, screams apex court

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new delhi — The Supreme Court on Wednesday came down heavily on the Centre and the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India for not being able to protect the iconic Taj Mahal, issuing a warning it will ‘shut it down’ and the authoritie­s should ‘demolish or restore’ the Mughal structure.

The apex court was unhappy as the Uttar Pradesh government failed to come out with a vision document to protect the Taj Mahal. A bench of Justice Madan B. Lokur and Justice Deepak was upset with the authoritie­s for not taking any step to preserve the Taj Mahal and said it’s “sheer lethargy” on the part of the authoritie­s.

“There is absolutely no willingnes­s to protect the Taj Mahal. Taj Mahal has to be protected. Either we will shut it down or you demolish or restore it,” the bench observed.

The court said the Taj Mahal is more beautiful than the Eiffel Tower and could have solved the country’s foreign exchange problem. —

new delhi — The Supreme Court on Wednesday came down heavily on the Centre and the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI) for not being able to protect the iconic Taj Mahal, issuing a warning it will “shut it down” and the authoritie­s should “demolish or restore” the Mughal structure.

The apex court was unhappy as the Uttar Pradesh government failed to come out with a vision document to protect the Taj Mahal.

A bench of Justice Madan B. Lokur and Justice Deepak was upset with the authoritie­s for not taking any step to preserve the Taj Mahal and said its “sheer lethargy” on the part of the authoritie­s. “There is absolutely no willingnes­s to protect the Taj Mahal. Taj Mahal has to be protected. Either we will shut it down or you demolish or restore it,” the bench observed.

The court said the Taj Mahal is more beautiful than the Eiffel Tower and could have solved the country’s foreign exchange problem.

“Eighty million go to watch Eiffel Tower which looks like a TV tower. Our Taj is more beautiful. If you had looked after it your foreign exchange problem would have been solved. Do you realise the loss caused to the country due to your apathy?,” observed the bench.

The Centre told the bench that Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur was assessing air pollution level in and around the mausoleum and will give its report in four months.

It said a special committee has also been set up to find the source of pollution in and around the Taj, which will suggest measures to prevent it.

The Uttar Pradesh government had earlier told the bench that it would place before the court a draft of vision document on protection and preservati­on of the Taj Mahal that was built by Emperor Shah Jahan

in memory of his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal.

Saying it would hear the case next on July 31 on a day-to-day basis, the bench told the Centre to furnish full details of the steps taken and action it intends to take for protecting the Taj Mahal.

The court also sought personal appearance of the chairman of Taj

Trapezium Zone (TTZ) — a 10,400sqkm area spread over the districts of Agra, Firozabad, Mathura, Hathras and Etah in Uttar Pradesh and Bharatpur in Rajasthan — to explain violation of it’s orders prohibitin­g expansion of industrial units in the zone.

The UP government had said it was also trying to take care of the environmen­t around the structure so that the historic monument could be there for another 400 years and not just for a generation.

The court has been hearing a plea filed by environmen­talist M.C. Mehta seeking protection of the Taj from the ill-effects of polluting gases and deforestat­ion in and around the area.

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