Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
India

On Independence Day, UK Returns 12Th Century Buddha Statue Stolen 57 Years Ago

IANS, 15 Aug, 2018 01:10 PM
    A 12th century bronze Buddha statue stolen from a museum at Nalanda in Bihar nearly 60 years ago was returned to India today by the London's Metropolitan Police as part of a ceremony here to mark India's Independence Day.
     
     
    The bronze statue with silver inlay is one of the 14 statues stolen in 1961 from the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) site museum in Nalanda and changed several hands over the years before surfacing at a London auction.
     
     
    Once the dealer and the owner were made aware the sculpture was the same one that had been stolen from India, the Metropolitan Police said they cooperated with the Met's Art and Antiques Unit and agreed for the piece to be returned to India.
     
     
    The statue was identified at a trade fair in March this year by Lynda Albertson of the Association for Research into Crimes Against Art (ARCA) and Vijay Kumar from the India Pride Project, who then alerted the police.
     
     
    Scotland Yard returned the statue stolen to the Indian High Commissioner to the UK, YK Sinha, as part of a ceremony to mark Independence Day at India House in London today.
     
     
    "I am delighted to return this piece of history. This is an excellent example of the results that can come with close cooperation between law enforcement, trade and scholars," said Met Police Detective Chief Inspector Sheila Stewart, who was accompanied by officials from the UK's Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport at the handover ceremony.
     
     
    "Although this was stolen over 50 years ago, this did not prevent the piece being recognised and the credit must go to the eagle eye informants who made us aware that the missing piece had been located after so many years," she said.
     
     
    Mr Sinha described the return of the "priceless Buddha" as a "wonderful gesture" and a particular honour given his own roots in Bihar.
     
     
    "I hope it will now go back to where it originally belongs... On our Independence Day, it (return of the statue) highlights the multi-faceted cooperation between our two countries," he said, after a Tricolour-hoisting ceremony to mark India's 72nd Independence Day at the Indian High Commission in London.
     
     
    Detective Constable Sophie Hayes of the Met's Art and Antique Unit said it had been established that there was no criminality by the current owner or the dealer who had been offering the stolen statue for sale.
     
     
    "Indeed, from the outset they have cooperated fully with the police to resolve this matter and they have made the decision to return the sculpture via the police," Ms Hayes said.
     
     
    "We are delighted to be able to facilitate the return of this important piece of cultural heritage to India," she added.
     
     
    The Art and Antiques Unit was founded 50 years ago and is one of the oldest specialist units in the Metropolitan Police Service. The unit prides itself on a "long history of reuniting owners with their stolen property".
     
     
    Michael Ellis, UK Minister for Arts, Heritage and Tourism, said: "As we celebrate India's Independence Day, I am proud to highlight the latest example of the UK's cultural diplomacy in action. Thanks to the work of the Metropolitan Police's Arts and Antiques Unit, we are one of the first countries to recover one of the 14 elusive Buddha statues stolen from Nalanda nearly 60 years ago."
     
     
    "This underlines how law enforcement and the London art market are working hand in hand to deliver positive cultural diplomacy to the world".

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Coaching Centres In Chandigarh Barred From Giving Tuitions In Morning

    Coaching Centres In Chandigarh Barred From Giving Tuitions In Morning
    Private coaching centres in Chandigarh will not be permitted to give tuitions to school-going students from 8 am to 3 pm for 60 days from July 1 in public interest, a senior official said here today.

    Coaching Centres In Chandigarh Barred From Giving Tuitions In Morning

    AIIMS Topper From Punjab’s Sangrur Wants To Be A Cardiologist, Serve Hometown

    AIIMS Topper From Punjab’s Sangrur Wants To Be A Cardiologist, Serve Hometown
    Eliza Bansal (17) from Punjab's Sangrur district, who topped the prestigious AIIMS MBBS exam this year, wants to serve her hometown Lehragaga which faces a shortage of doctors, her family said today.

    AIIMS Topper From Punjab’s Sangrur Wants To Be A Cardiologist, Serve Hometown

    Ludhiana NRI Jimmy Sandhu Had Ketamine Unit In Goa

    Jimmy Sandhu, an NRI who hails from Ludhiana, who was arrested from a private hospital here by a team of the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence on June 14, is a key player of an international drug racket busted recently by the DRI, Mumbai zone.

    Ludhiana NRI Jimmy Sandhu Had Ketamine Unit In Goa

    Hang Godmen Involved In Illegal Activities, Says Baba Ramdev

    The Yoga guru further stated that donning saffron-coloured clothes is not the only criteria for being a religious leader.

    Hang Godmen Involved In Illegal Activities, Says Baba Ramdev

    Kashmir In Political Crisis As BJP-PDP Government Falls

    Jammu and Kashmir was pushed into a major political crisis on Tuesday after the BJP suddenly pulled out of the ruling combine with the PDP, bringing down Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti's 27-month-old government amid surging violence in the state.

    Kashmir In Political Crisis As BJP-PDP Government Falls

    Jaipur Choreographer, Upset After Missing Flight, Makes Hoax Bomb Call In Jaipur

    A choreographer was arrested on Tuesday for allegedly making a hoax bomb call after missing a Jaipur-Mumbai Indigo flight, an official said.

    Jaipur Choreographer, Upset After Missing Flight, Makes Hoax Bomb Call In Jaipur