Khaleej Times

US sues town for rejecting mosque plan

- Reuters

new york — The US government sued a New Jersey town on Tuesday, saying that it discrimina­ted against Muslims when it rejected an Islamic group’s plan to build a mosque there.

The lawsuit in federal court in Newark, New Jersey, said planning officials in Bernards Township deliberate­ly set out impossibly strict requiremen­ts that the Islamic Society of Basking Ridge was unable to meet, after members of the public objected based on religious bias.

“The reasons set forth by the Planning Board for denying the site plan applicatio­n were pretextual, and the Planning Board in fact denied the applicatio­n based on discrimina­tion toward Muslims,” the US Department of Justice lawsuit said.

The Islamic Society, which rents

The reasons set forth by the Planning board for denying the site plan applicatio­n were pretextual, US Department of Justice lawsuit

space in a community centre for prayer services, had previously filed its own discrimina­tion lawsuit against the town in March, following a four-year battle with the planning board. That complaint has drawn supporting court filings from civil rights organisati­ons.

A lawyer for the town, located about 48km west of New York City, declined to comment on Tuesday, saying he had not read the Justice Department’s lawsuit. The town’s administra­tor could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The Justice Department’s allegation­s coincide with an increase in hate crimes, particular­ly against Muslims, following a divisive presidenti­al campaign.

Federal hate crime laws increase the penalties for criminal behaviour that is motivated by bias against the victim based on race, religion, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientatio­n or other protected classifica­tions.

Both lawsuits rely on a federal law barring land use regulation­s that place an undue burden on the right to freely exercise one’s religion.

The Islamic Society bought a four-acre plot in 2011 and filed its plans for a mosque in 2012. Over the next 3 -1/2 years, the planning board held 39 separate hearings, far more than for any other proposal, the department said.

The mosque’s architect endeavored to create a building that would comport with the surroundin­g residentia­l neighbourh­ood, forgoing the traditiona­l dome and fashioning minarets to look like small chimneys, the lawsuit said.

But the plan drew vociferous opposition from a number of residents, the lawsuit said. The mosque’s mailbox was vandalised.

The planning board repeatedly demanded changes in the plans, only to meet each proposed fix with a new requiremen­t, the lawsuit said.

The Justice Department in July sued Bensalem, Pennsylvan­ia, for denying zoning approval to a proposed mosque. —

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