There are strange figures and animals worked out of stone and stucco on the walls of the outer fort facing the Naya Qila.[4] During the rule of Sultan Abdullah Qutb Shah (1625–1672), Mughal governor of the Deccan Plateau, Aurangzeb aimed the fusillade against Golkonda Fort in January 1656.[8] The construction of the Hyderabad Golf Course in the Naya Qila area met with a lot of resistance from various NGOs and organisations.[17] The controversy regarding the historic lands' use as a golf course also sparked debates among scholars part of the heritage and conversation circles around the 'Adopt a Heritage' scheme of the government of India, under which the Dalmia Bharat Private Limited was allowed to adopt the Red Fort.There have also been concerns regarding the negative ecological implications of the Golf Course, outlined in a comprehensive document shared by the NGO, Better Hyderabad.