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India will open a tomb allegedly guarded by an ancient curse

India will open a tomb allegedly guarded by an ancient curse
NEW DELHI, September 26. India will open a tomb that is supposedly protected by an ancient curse. This decision was made by the country's Supreme Court.

According to the decree, the last closed vault in the Sri Padmanambhaswamy Temple in southern India will remain so for the duration of the inventory of already discovered treasures, but after the work it will definitely be opened.

Stashes of untold riches were found in this Hindu temple in Kerala in early July this year. Among the treasures are bags of gold, precious stones and jewelry. The total preliminary cost of what was discovered exceeds $20 billion.

Most of the discovered treasures, experts said, are offerings from believers and wealth that belonged to the rulers of the princely state of Travancore, which occupied the territory of Kerala.

The sixth and final vault may be the richest, but the local priests categorically refuse to open it. They note that at the entrance to the cache there is a mysterious “snake sign” that threatens numerous disasters if the vault is broken into.

Let us add that the initiator of opening the caches, ex-police officer Sundararajan, died mysteriously in mid-July.