Arab Times

Temple dispute hearings end:

Subcontine­nt

-

India’s top court on Wednesday ended hearings to settle a land title dispute between Muslims and Hindus over plans to build a Hindu temple on a site in northern India where Hindu hard-liners demolished a 16th century mosque in 1992, sparking deadly violence.

The five judges are expected to announce their verdict in mid-November.

They heard 14 petitions challengin­g a 2010 lower court ruling that 1.12 hectares (2.77 acres) of disputed land be partitione­d among Hindus and Muslims.

The destructio­n of the mosque in Ayodhya, a town in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, in 1992 sparked massive Hindu-Muslim violence that left 2,000 people dead.

The judges started day-to-day proceeding­s in August after mediation proceeding­s failed to find a compromise between the two communitie­s.

Hindu hard-liners say they want to build a new temple to Hindu god Ram on the site, which they revere as his birthplace. They say the mosque was built after a temple dedicated to the Hindu god was destroyed by Muslim invaders.

K. Parasaran, an attorney for a Hindu group, told the court that there were several mosques in Ayodhya town where Muslims can pray, but Hindus cannot change the birthplace of their deity Ram.

The court hearing on Wednesday witnessed an element of drama when advocate Rajeev Dhavan, representi­ng Muslim parties in the dispute, tore a pictorial map of the disputed land put forward by an attorney representi­ng Hindu groups, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had promised to build the temple in 2014 elections that brought him to power. But he later decided to wait for the court verdict despite pressure from millions of Hindu hard-liners who asked his government to bring legislatio­n to build the temple. (AP)

Modi

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait