This Article is From Oct 21, 2013

After criticism of hunt for buried gold, Narendra Modi's conciliatory tweet

After criticism of hunt for buried gold, Narendra Modi's conciliatory tweet

Last week in Chennai, Narendra Modi had derided the central government for ordering an excavation at a ruined palace in Unnao. (AP)

New Delhi: After attacking the government for allegedly ordering a treasure hunt for buried gold in Uttar Pradesh on the basis of a sadhu's dream, Narendra Modi is trying to propitiate the followers of the sage, Shobhan Sarkar.

He tweeted today that lakhs of followers have faith in Yogi Swami Shobhan Sarkar.

Mr Modi's attempt at appeasement comes after Shobhan Sarkar's aide wrote to Mr Modi, challenging his criticism and accusing him of violating "the nobility of a saint."

The letter asks, "If you were PM and this information of buried gold had been offered to you, would you have ordered the excavation, or would you have mocked the information?"

Unnao-gold-excavation-with-caption-295x200_u3.jpg
Mr Modi, who is the BJP's choice for prime minister, last week derided the central government for ordering an excavation at a ruined palace in Unnao . "The whole world is making fun of us. The government is digging for 1000 tonnes of gold based on some information. The Delhi government has money in Switzerland. It's worth more than 1,000 tonnes of gold. We need to bring that money back," he had said referring to the excavation.  (Don't need to dig for gold if we get black money back: Narendra Modi)

The government has denied reports that Shobhan Sarkar's vision inspired the large excavation that's being handled by the Archeological Survey of India or ASI.

The ASI says that its exercise is based on the opinion of geological experts.  "Archaeology is a science, we don't base it on someone's dream," the agency's Director, Syed Jamal Hasan, told NDTV.  "We have been restoring various places on the Ganges basin, this is routine.  We expect to find some historical remains, pots and something of historical significance, no question of finding tonnes of gold," he added.

.