Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Won’t defer Ayodhya case hearing: SC

Sunni Waqf board wanted hearing after LS election; documents incomplete, claims Sibal

- Bhadra Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday decided to continue the final hearing of the Ram Janmabhoom­i-Babri Masjid case on February 8 next year, brushing aside the plea of the Sunni Waqf Board to postpone it till after the 2019 Lok Sabha elections as the final verdict would have political and electoral repercussi­ons.

The Waqf Board’s stand, articulate­d by its counsel Kapil Sibal, a senior Congress leader, took on a political hue outside the court, with Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah asking Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi to clear his stand on the Ram temple issue.

“On the one hand, temples are being visited (by Gandhi) ahead of elections. On the other hand, they (the Congress) are trying to delay hearing of the Ram Janmabhoom­i case. The Congress has double standards on the issue. They should clarify their stand,” Shah said in Ahmedabad.

Shah demanded the case be heard as soon as possible, saying: “The Supreme Court should give a judgment and a grand Ram temple should be built in Ayodhya.”

Appearing for the Waqf Board, one of the plaintiffs in the Ram Janmabhoom­i-Babri Masjid case, Sibal took strong objection to the manner in which the hearing was expedited on the request of “someone (BJP leader Subramania­n Swamy) who is not even a party in the case”.

The Supreme Court commenced the final hearing of the case at a time when the Congress and the BJP are engaged in a political battle in poll-bound Gujarat, where the opposition party is aspiring to dislodge the BJP from power after 22 years.

The BJP’s criticism of the Congress over Sibal’s arguments in the top court could reignite a debate on the Ram temple issue and Hindutva.

It was on Swamy’s request that the then Chief Justice JS Khehar set up a bench to hear 13 appeals against the Allahabad high court’s 2010 judgment in the controvers­ial case.

A circular was issued on August 3, listing the matter for a hearing on August 11.

The high court had ruled for a three-way division of the disputed 2.77 acres in Ayodhya.

The parties — the Sunni Waqf Board, the Nirmohi Akhara and the deity Ram Lalla (Lord Ram as an infant, represente­d by a VHP activist). Swamy, who intervened in the case, claimed the pending appeals infringed on his right to worship at the temple. On August 11 the bench fixed the matter for hearing on December 6, the 25th anniversar­y of the demolition of Babri Masjid, and said no further adjournmen­ts would be given.

› This is not an ordinary suit... It will have serious ramificati­ons. The court should not hear this matter that will have an impact on polity KAPIL SIBAL, appearing for the › Sunni Waqf Board

On the one hand, temples are being visited. On the other hand, they are trying to delay hearing. The Congress has double standards AMIT SHAH, BJP chief, asking Rahul Gandhi to clear Congress stand

“Why should this court fall in the trap? Why was it not heard earlier, why now? This is not an ordinary suit. It is perhaps the most important litigation in the history of India and will decide the country’s future. It will have serious ramificati­ons. The court should not in this circumstan­ce hear this matter that will have an impact on polity,” Sibal argued before a three-judge bench led by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, asking it to refer the case to a larger bench of five judges.

He also pointed out that technical formalitie­s in the case were still incomplete and documents on which the high court had based its ruling were yet to be filed. The bench did not accept Sibal’s arguments but deferred the matter to February 8, 2018, with instructio­ns to advocates of contesting parties to complete the formalitie­s. It ordered the lawyers for both sides to sit together, work in harmony and ascertain which documents have been filed so that “no adjournmen­t takes place in the case”. “Both sides had a message for this court. But we know what to do. Don’t give a message to this court by telling us what message we will send out,” CJI Misra said as he took strong exception to the arguments advanced. “We will start the hearing.” The high-voltage hearing lasted over an hour and witnessed heated exchanges between the counsel representi­ng the Sunni Wakf Board and those appearing for Hindu Mahant, Ram Lalla and the Uttar Pradesh government.

While Sibal and his colleagues, senior advocates Rajeev Dhawan and Dushyant Dave, insisted technical formalitie­s were yet to be complied, senior counsel Harish Salve, CS Vaidyanath­an and additional solicitor general Tushar Mehta disputed this.

When the bench insisted on proceeding with the hearing and allowed Vaidyanath­an to open his arguments on behalf of Ram Lalla, Sibal, Dhawan and Dave threatened to walk out.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Antisabota­ge squad frisking pilgrims at Saryu Ghat in Ayodhya on Tuesday.
HT PHOTO Antisabota­ge squad frisking pilgrims at Saryu Ghat in Ayodhya on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India