Bangkok Post

MUMBAI MOSQUE OPENS TO INDIAN WOMEN, NATION’S TOP COURT RULES

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NEW DELHI: Women in India have the right to fully access a famous mosque in the city of Mumbai, a top court ruled on Friday, bolstering a nationwide campaign aimed at securing women their religious rights and allowing them entry into all places of worship.

Ruling on a petition filed by Muslim women’s rights activists who demanded entry to the men-only inner sanctum of the Haji Ali Dargah, a Mumbai High Court bench said the restrictio­n violated women’s fundamenta­l right to equality.

“Today the court is ruled in our favour and I am very thankful. It has been a hard fight over many years and we lost momentum as many women were concerned of what society would think of us,” Bibi Khatoon from the Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan, or Indian Muslim Women’s Movement, told reporters.

The 15th century shrine, built on an islet 500 metres from the city’s coast, can only be reached at low tide and draws tens of thousands of worshipper­s every year.

In 2012, the trust which manages the shrine imposed a ban on women entering its inner sanctum saying that it would be a “grievous sin” to allow women near the tomb of Sufi saint Haji Ali who is buried there. However, court officials said women would not be able to immediatel­y enter the shrine as the judgment has been suspended for six weeks after the Haji Ali Dargah Trust said it would appeal against the decision.

The fight to allow women into the shrine gained momentum after a petition was lodged earlier this year with the Supreme Court demanding access for women to the Hindu Sabarimala Ayyappa temple in southern state of Kerala.

The protests this year have also played out on social media, with #RighttoPra­y and #LetWomenPr­ay trending on Twitter with campaigner­s saying the restrictio­ns are based on patriarchy rather than on religion.

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