Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Missing bell: 7 years on, CBI conducts narco test

- Gaurav Bisht gaurav.bisht@hindustant­imes.com

Seven years after an antique bell gifted to Lord Irwin was stolen from Shimla’s majestic Viceregal lodge, the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion is now conducting a narco test of security personnel at the Indian Institute of Advanced studies housed in the British era building.

It was in 2010 that the antique bell made of eight metal alloys weighing 30 kgs went missing from the reception.

The bell was tied to a 60-kg wooden plank placed next to the reception of the building.

The theft had raised concerns not only among the management of the Indian Institute of Advanced Studies, but also among antique lovers and visitors who would often get themselves photograph­ed with the iconic bell. The bell was gifted to then Indian Viceroy Lord Irwin by the King of Nepal in 1930.

“The CBI has taken a security guard from IIAS for narco test to Delhi,” Prem Chand, officiatin­g secretary of the IIAS told HT. Unable to gather any vital clues about the stolen bell, the CBI had earlier this year announced a 1-lakh reward for anyone providing any leads about the theft. This had raised the hackles of Shimlaites since the prestigiou­s institute enjoys a two-tier security.

The bell was stolen on October 22, 2010 . The police investigat­ions had then suspected that it could not have been possible for thieves to take away the bell without a vehicle. The police probed the case for five years but to no avail. Finally, in 2013 it prepared a report saying the bell remained “untraced.” Subsequent­ly, IIAS approached the high court, which ordered a CBI probe into the case.

Built in 1888 during the regime of Lord Dufferin, the antique building that witnessed scores of historical moments is facing structural distress.

Renamed as Rashtrapat­i Niwas after Independen­ce, it was on October 20, 1964, that the then President of India S Radhakrish­nan inaugurate­d the institute afresh.

 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ?? The theft had shocked antique lovers and visitors who often got themselves photograph­ed with the iconic bell.
HT FILE PHOTO The theft had shocked antique lovers and visitors who often got themselves photograph­ed with the iconic bell.

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