DADU: Cracks have appeared in the walls of 320-year-old Khudaabad mosque despite the fact that Rs120 million have been spent on its preservation over the past five years, raising fears the historic structure may fall apart any moment.
The mosque located in Khudaabad town, 11 kilometres from here along Indus Highway, which remained capital of Sindh during Kalhoro rein from 1701 to 1751 AD, is on the brink of collapse thanks to negligence of the provincial antiquity, culture and tourism department. Tiles have also started falling off the walls, eclipsing its beauty, according to experts and visitors.
Abid Ali Babar, an archaeologist, said the mosque which was built by Kalhoro ruler Mian Yar Mohammad from 1700 to 1718 was in urgent need of repairs and preservation. Recent rains had also done irreparable harm to the structure, he said.
Historian Ihsan Ali Abro said that work on the preservation of the mosque had been going on intermittently since 2009. It was undertaken by the works and services department which kept working on it for six years without seeking expert advice. Millions of rupees were embezzled in the name of the mosque’s preservation, he said.
Afterwards, he said, the provincial antiquity, culture and tourism department took the work in hand and spent Rs120 million in five years without bringing any major improvement to the structure.