Lucknow, Sep 20 : The world famous Chhota Imambara that is must on the itinerary of every visitor to Lucknow, has now been ‘scarred’ by the Lucknow Police.
The police outpost built at the gate of Chhota Imambara has not only disturbed the facade of the monument but also is a major violation of the rules of Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), and the Hussainabad Allied Trust (HAT).
The officials of the ASI and the HAT, which owns the structure, call it a case of ‘extreme illegality and brazen violation of the Ancient Monument and Archaeological Sites and Remains (Amendment and Validation) (AMASR) Act, 2010’. The Act strictly prohibits construction or renovation within a 100-metre area of a protected monument.
Manoj Saxena, deputy superintending archaeologist, Lucknow Circle, ASI said, “It is a purely illegal act. We have served notice on the police station to stop the work immediately.”
I. P. Singh, Assistant Commissioner of Police, Chowk area, under which the police outpost comes, said, “The matter is in our knowledge. We have ordered a probe into it.”
Interestingly, the restoration of the police outpost, locally known as Satkhanda police chowki, is also in violation of the high court’s order, directing the HAT to fund and the ASI to ensure restoration of the same gate.
Officials with the HAT said the illegality first came to light four days ago when a group of masons was found busy demolishing the shade of the gate to pave the way for a new one to suit their own requirement and design.
“By the time, we got the information and rushed to the spot, the entire shade, all made up of red lakhauri bricks, was demolished by masons. On inquiring, they simply responded that “Chowki prabhari sahib ka adesh hai (It is the police outpost in-charge’s order)”, an official of the HAT said.
The team discovered that there was no illegal act done to the monument. “We also found that the interior of the chowki had all been changed. In place of the old lakhauri walls, there were new cement walls,” the official added.
When the officials objected to the illegality, police personnel assured them that they would stop the work immediately and apply for permission for the same.
“But overnight, they re-started construction work and completed the structure. They got it painted so that it gels with the remaining structure,” the official further said.
A letter has also been sent by the HAT in this regard, to the City Magistrate, who is the secretary of the trust that was formed by King Mohammed Ali Shah in 1839 to meet the religious and charitable needs of the community and to maintain the Nawabi-era structures owned by the trust.
Sushil Pratap Singh, City Magistrate and secretary of HAT, said, “I am unaware of this illegality. If this is so, we would serve notice and will initiate maximum action against the erring person.”
The police outpost was established in the 1990s to maintain law and order in the area, which was very sensitive due to sectarian disputes.
Since then, the police outpost had become a permanent feature at the gate. Officials also called it a contempt of the high court order as the matter of restoration of the same gate was pending with the court.
The restoration work of the gate was started in 2014 following an order of the Allahabad high court.
In compliance with the high court order passed on May 12, 2014, a meeting of officials of the district administration, ASI and directorate of archaeology, Uttar Pradesh, was held under the chairmanship of the then principal secretary, department of culture, on May 17, 2014 and it was directed that the restoration work of the eastern gate of Chhota Imambara would be done by the ASI and would be funded by HAT.
The HC order was an outcome of a public interest litigation (PIL) petition filed by S. Mohammed Haider, a corporate lawyer and heritage activist, who had approached the court in 2013. In the PIL, Haider had sought the court’s intervention for ensuring repair, maintenance and removal of encroachment within the premises of the monuments.
Disclaimer: This story is auto-generated from IANS service.