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A Pakistani court has accepted a petition seeking direction to the government to bring back the 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 court directed the office to fix the petition before any appropriate bench for hearing.
In December last year, the registrar office’s had dismissed the plea terming it as non-maintainable 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 can she not 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 Daleep Singh, grandson of Maharaja Ranjeet Singh, and took it to Britain.
The London-trained lawyer said that he has written 786 letters to the Queen and to Pakistani officials before filing the lawsuit.
India has made regular requests for the jewel’s return, saying the diamond is an integral part of the country’s history and culture.
India says that Koh-i-Noor was illegally acquired and demands that it should be returned along with other treasures looted during colonial rule.
A group has also mounted pressure on the British monarch to return the jewel, which was plundered, to India.