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Saturday, October 19, 2013

A 2500 Tonnes Gold Treasure In Unnao ; ASI Starts Excavation To Verify Claim By Saint

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The nation is eagerly looking at Unnao, 150kms from Lucknow where a saint has predicted a depository of 2500 tonnes of Gold under the fort. With this prediction in light, the Archeological Survey Of India has started the excavation works to verify the claims.

The saint, Shobhan Sarkar, who reportedly had the divine vision or dream about 1,000 tonnes of gold being buried under the Daudiyakheda fort, has sparked off more sensation with the prediction of an even bigger gold deposit at another fort. In his letter to the district magistrate (DM) of Fatehpur, Sarkar has said that about 2,500 tonnes of gold was buried under a dilapidated 500-year-old fort in Adampur village of that district.

As of the latest news, there has been no surprises for the excavation team, but the administration has requested to continue for few more days to find if this is true.

This is just not a mock as the Saint and his disciples have deposited a sum of Rs. 10 Lakhs to the government and has already agreed to be forfeited from the sum and also legal actions incase this claim is found as false.
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He has also written to the Kanpur DM to get a survey done for treasure in the Chaubeypur and Parade Ground areas of Kanpur. The saint, known to have divine powers, has also sent the related information to the Reserve Bank of India.

“We are only doing our duty towards this country. We are not obliging anyone,” Swami OmJi Maharaj, one of the saint’s oldest disciples, told mediapersons. He asked curious journalists not to be in a hurry.

“You just wait and see, each and every word of his (Shobhan Sarkar’s) predictions will come true. He communicates with divine powers,” he asserted.

A 12 member team is at the site headed by Deputy director SP Mishra after a long havan and pooja by saints. About 20 labourers are engaged in the digging in a 30 square feet area marked by the ASI. The fort is heavily barricaded and guarded by a heavy deployment of police and PAC men. No one is being allowed near the excavation site.

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Updated at: Saturday, October 19, 2013

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