Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Centre may table bill on Ayodhya temple trust in Winter session

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NEWDELHI: The Centre is contemplat­ing introducin­g a Bill that will give legislativ­e backing to a Trust that will oversee the constructi­on of a Ram temple on the 2,77-acre site in Ayodhya and the running of the shrine in line with the Supreme Court’s November 9 judgment, a senior government official who did not want to be named said.

The legislatio­n is likely to be introduced in the coming Parliament session which starts on November 18. “The issue is being discussed at the highest level, and it is being fine-tuned,” the senior official said and added, “the proposed legislatio­n is likely to lay down in detail the functionin­g and responsibi­lities of the Trust.”

The Centre is acting in line with the Supreme Court order, which cleared the way for the constructi­on of a Ram temple on the site in Ayodhya and directed it to allot a 5 acre plot at a “prominent” location to the Sunni Waqf Board for building a mosque. Legislativ­e backing will give the plan a stronger footing.

In its 1,045 page verdict, a fivejudge bench of the apex court headed b y Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi ruled: “The Central Government shall, within a period of three months from the date of this judgment, formulate a scheme” under the Acquisitio­n of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act, 1993. The scheme shall envisage the setting up a trust with a board of trustees or any other appropriat­e body...”.

Although deliberati­ons are still underway, there is a strong possibilit­y that the ministry of culture would be entrusted with the responsibi­lity of piloting the legislatio­n and the subsequent formation of the trust in line with the proposed legislatio­n.

“We shall look at the provisions of the proposed legislatio­n if it comes and then react . However what I have read off the judgement It does not say that legislatio­n is required to institutio­nalise the trust . The Supreme Court has used it’s remit under Article 142 of the Constituti­on- substantia­l justice therefore the direction to the government is not an obiter but a commandmen­t “senior Congress leader and member of Lok Sabha Manish Tewari said.

On the proposed legislatio­n, senior counsel and Constituti­on expert Rakesh Dwivedi said, “The Supreme Court in its order has asked for a formation of a trust. I think it is proper that it comes in the form of a law.”

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