Headlines
India's Parrot Lady to fly back home from Canada

Ottawa, April 16
India's Parrot Lady' is to
return home, after Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Wednesday
handed over to Prime Minister Narendra Modi the 800-year-old Indian
sandstone sculpture of a woman holding a parrot.
The sculpture
dates back to the 12th century. It was returned in accordance with the
1970 UNESCO Convention, tweeted India's external affairs ministry
spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin.
"Canada returns Indian heritage
piece -- "Parrot Lady" PM @narendramodi receives sandstone sculpture
from Khajuraho," he tweeted.
The prized Indian statue was returned at the Library of Parliament in Ottawa.
Modi
in exchange presented Harper with a miniature painting of Guru Nanak
Dev with his disciples. The painting is by Jaipur-based artist, Virendra
Bannu.
The around three-foot high statue of Parrot Lady' turned
up in Canada in 2011 in the possession of an individual who did not have
proper documentation; it was seized under the Cultural Property Export
and Import which controls antiquities and other cultural objects being
imported from foreign states, reports The Globe and Mail.
"The
Parrot Lady is what is known as a naayika, or heroine. She is
voluptuous, scantily clad, posed in manner that is a tad saucy, and has a
parrot on her back. She is just one of many erotic stone ladies that
were created to adorn the Khajuraho temples," says the Canadian daily.
A
team of Archaeological Survey of India officials had travelled to
Canada to inspect the statue and find out ways to bring it back to
India.













