Hindu Mahasabha to challenge Ayodhya verdict

December 18, 2010 07:11 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 06:41 am IST - New Delhi

The Akhil Bharat Hindu Mahasabha has decided to move the Supreme Court challenging the Allahabad High Court verdict on the Ramjanambhoomi-Babri Masjid title suits, contending that the entire disputed site should be allotted to Hindus.

The Mahasabha will submit that the High Court had erred in directing that 2.77 acres of disputed land be divided into three parts among Muslims, Hindus and the Nirmohi Akhara.

“We will be filing an appeal in the Supreme Court on Monday and we will not sit idle till we get the entire disputed land for the construction of a magnificent Ram Temple there,” Kamlesh Tiwari, member of the Mahasabha, told a press conference in New Delhi.

The Mahasabha has earlier filed a caveat to pre-empt any ex-parte order on the Ayodhya title dispute.

The title dispute on Ramjanmabhoomi-Babri Masjid structure has already reached the Supreme Court with the Jamiat Ulama-e-Hind (JUH) and the Sunni Wakf Board challenging the Allahabad High Court verdict.

Challenging the verdict of the High Court’s Lucknow bench, the JUH too had submitted in the appeal that the judgement is based on faith and not on evidence.

“It is humbly submitted that the mosque was illegally demolished. However, the ruins still exist. The foundation of the mosque is still intact. Title would not extinguish by demolishing the mosque,” it said.

A three-judge bench of the High Court had passed three separate judgements on September 30 but the majority verdict held that the area covered by the central dome of the three-domed structure, where the idol of Lord Rama is located, belongs to Hindus.

While two judges were of the view that the entire disputed land should be divided into three equal parts, each to be given to Sunni Waqf Board, Nirmohi Akhara and the parties representing ‘Ram Lalla Virajman’, one of the judges had held that the entire disputed area belonged to Hindus.

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