New Delhi: A member of the CPI(M), M.B. Rajesh has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi urging him to take immediate steps to release funds to re-start the 52-minute light-and-sound show at Amritsar’s Jallianwala Bagh.

Rajesh, who recently visited the historic site with his family, was informed by the staff there that the show stands “abandoned due to paucity of funds.” Jallianwala Bagh National Memorial Trust, which is responsible for the memorial’s upkeep, runs under the chairmanship of the prime minister.

Taking a dig at the State of Unity – a 597-foot statue of Sardar Patel built at an estimated cost of nearly Rs 3,000 crore – Rajesh tweeted that even in the centenary year of Jallianwala Bagh massacre, the government has failed to release even “Rs 1 for 3000 martyrs.”

Jalianwalabagh light & sound show stopped for want of fund by the trust chaired by PM Modi in the centenary year.3000cr for one statue& not Rs 1 for 3000 matrys. I requested PM to release fund for the show. pic.twitter.com/1NhlUxcCmG — M.B.Rajesh (@MBRajeshCPM) February 11, 2019

The Union government had started the sound show as a tribute to those killed in the massacre. In April 2010, the then defence minister A.K. Anthony had decided it dedicate it to the public. According to a report in The Tribune, the show has been defunct since 2014 and there is no clear plan to revive it.

Also read: The Statue of Unity Cost Rs 2,989 Crore. Here’s What Else That Money Could Have Bought

While Rajesh, in his letter to the prime minister, has urged him to ensure that “sufficient funds are made available to the memorial to resume the light and sound show and other necessary facilities,” the issue, reportedly, is not the absence of money but the want of an official nod from the Modi-led trust.

The culture ministry, which maintains the memorial, sanctioned Rs 8 crore last year to revive the light-and-sound show project. Navjot Singh Sidhu, who heads the ministry, told The Tribune in October 2018 that additional funds totaling Rs 20 crore had also been received for setting up a commemorative landscape and museum.

The money, however, is lying unused as the trust has not issued a no objection certification. “It is pity that we have money, but cannot utilise it as the Centre is reluctant to give nod. The Jallianwala Bagh never belonged to any political party, why should there be race for credit war,” Sidhu was quoted as saying.

April 13, 2019 will mark the centenary of the Amritsar massacre, “where hundreds were mercilessly murdered by the British symbolising unparalled sacrificed in our history,” Rajesh has written in his letter dated February 6, adding: “I strongly feel that citing lack of funds in maintaining such a living memorial of our freedom struggle is unpardonable.”