Deccan Chronicle

Ayodhya verdict test case of law: Madani

Jamiat chief hopes SC ruling will be based on proof

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Asserting that the Ram janambhoom­i-Babri Masjid case is “not just a land dispute case” but a “test case of the supremacy of the law,” Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind on Wednesday exuded confidence that the Supreme Court’s verdict in the case will be based on “evidence and not faith.”

Appealing for HinduMusli­m unity, the prominent Muslim body’s chief Syed Arshad Madani said that the organisati­on will respect the apex court’s verdict in the matter.

Mr Madani, along with other religious leaders from the Muslim community and prominent Muslims influencer­s from various fields, had on Tuesday held a meeting with the RSS leaders at Union minister for minority affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi’s residence over the apex court’s impending verdict.

Claiming that Jamait’s mediation offer that Muslims will give up the claim on the “Ram Chabutra” provided the Hindu parties give up their claim over the threedome portion and its courtyard area, did not succeed as the Hindu parties, involved in the case, refused to budge, and claimed the entire land, including where the Masjid once stood.

“Be it Ram Lalla or the Nirmohi Akhara, they did not climb down and stuck to their stand. Mediation did not succeed,” said Mr Madani adding that the Jamait believes that the apex court will give its decision on the case based on law and not faith.

The Jamait chief said

that the Babri Masjid has “always remained as a mosque and is a mosque under the Shariah law and will remain till the day of judgment even if the government or any power on the earth tried to change the status of the mosque by using its might.”

He said that the case is based on historical facts and evidence that the

Babri Masjid was constructe­d without demolishin­g any temple or any other place of worship.

“.... the Supreme Court has also made it amply clear that it is a title suit case only...therefore, any individual or organisati­on has no right to surrender the mosque in the hope of getting any alternativ­e,” the Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind chief said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India