Side by side: An aerial view of the Gyanvapi mosque, left, and the Kashiviswanath temple on the banks of the Ganga in Varanasi. AP
Legal Correspondent NEW DELHI
Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind has moved the Supreme Court seeking the dismissal of a petition which challenges the validity of the Places of Worship (Special Provisions) Act, 1991, a law which prohibits the conversion of any religious place.
The Muslim body wants to intervene in the petition against the 1991 Act, filed by advocate Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay.
‘Floodgates of litigation’
The Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind argued that if the petition was entertained, it would open floodgates of litigation against “countless mosques in the country”.
“There is a list of numerous mosques which is doing the rounds on social media, alleging that the said mosques were built allegedly by destroying Hindu places of worship… the religious divide from which the country is recovering in the aftermath of the Ayodhya dispute will only be widened,” the application said.
Last year, the court asked for the government’s response to Mr. Upadhyay’s petition, which challenged the provisions in the Act which froze the religious character of a place of worship as it had existed on August 15, 1947.
Mr. Upadhyay had found the cut-off date “arbitrary and irrational”, preventing Hindus, Jains, Buddhists, and Sikhs from approaching courts to “re-claim” their places of worship which were “invaded” and “encroached” upon by “fundamentalist barbaric invaders”.
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