GYANVAPI SURVEY
trict administration not to delay the survey by making an excuse, said Chaturvedi.
The court was hearing a plea by a group of women to allow daily worship of Hindu deities whose idols are located on an outer wall of the mosque.
The mosque management committee had opposed filming inside the mosque. Amid the opposition, the survey was stalled for a while.
The court also dismissed objections to the opening of the two closed basements in the mosque complex for the survey, according to the counsel representing the Hindu petitioners.
The judge rejected the application for replacing advocate commissioner Ajay Kumar Mishra and also appointed Vishal Singh as special advocate commissioner and Ajay Pratap Singh as assistant advocate commissioner.The court said Mishra and Vishal Singh will together complete the survey. In the absence of any one of them, the other will carry out the task, the judge said. The counsel for the Hindu side, Madan Mohan Yadav, said the court also clarified that the videography will be done inside the Gyanvapi masjid.
The mosque management had said there are locks preventing access to the two basements. The court made it clear that in case the keys are not available, the locks should be broken to get the survey done.
The court has also directed the district magistrate and the police commissioner to monitor the exercise and lodge an FIR if anyone created hurdles in the survey, according to Mohan Yadav.
It said the survey could be done in the Gyanvapi-Shringar Gauri complex between 8 am to 12 pm daily till its completion. The survey report should be submitted by Tuesday.
The court ordered that advocate commissioner Ajai Kumar Mishra and the special advocate commissioner Vishal Singh will jointly conduct the proceedings of the commission that is survey. In case, Mishra is absent, Vishal Singh will carry out the proceedings to conduct the survey. If Singh is absent, Ajai Mishra will do it.
Expressing dissatisfaction with the order, Abhay Nath Yadav, one of the advocates of the Anjuman Intezamia Masjid Committee, said, “I have just received the copy of the order. I will go through the order thoroughly. I just superficailly saw the order. We are not satisfied with the order. We will discuss our strategy with advocates part of the panel and find a legal remedy against the order. Then we will challenge it.”
Asked when the survey will resume, special advocate commissioner Vishal Singh said it would be decided after a meeting of the survey team. “First of all, we would hold a meeting in which we will take decision to start the proceedings of the survey. The proceedings of the survey will be conducted as per court order, Singh said.
The videographic survey of the mosque was ordered on April 18, 2021 by Judge Diwakar following the plea by Delhi residents Rakhi Singh, Laxmi Devi, Sita Sahu and others.
They sought permission to perform daily worship of Shringar Gauri, Lord Ganesha, Lord Hanuman and Nandi whose idols are located on the outer wall of the mosque. They also sought a court order to stop anyone from damaging the idols.
As the filming began on May 6, a lawyer for the mosque management committee filed an application seeking Mishra’s removal, alleging that he was not working in an impartial manner.
The mosque management had earlier contended that the court had not given any order to allow filming inside the mosque but to confine it up to the ‘chabutra’ (courtyard) outside the barricades enclosing the mosque premises.The court commissioner had on Friday conducted an inconclusive survey of some areas outside the mosque in the Gyanvapi-Shringar Gauri complex, amid slogan-shouting by the two sides.
Judge Diwakar had appointed Ajay Kumar Mishra as advocate commissioner on April 26 and the survey report was to be submitted initially by May 10.
(With agency inputs)