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The legal labyrinth of Ram's Ayodhya >Tue, 26 Mar 2002 09:15:44 -0800 >

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Tue, 26 Mar 2002 09:15:44 -0800

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[bJP News]: The legal labyrinth of Ram's AyodhyaTitle: The legal labyrinth of Ram's Ayodhya

Author: Arvind Lavakare

Publication: Rediff

March 26, 2002

It's a reality that may well belong to the realm of fiction. The first legal

case for repossession of the Ram Janambhoomi was filed in 1885. And the

petitioner won it! In 1886!

It was a civil appeal (no 27 of 1885) by one Mahant Raghubardas and the

defendant respondents were the secretary of state of India (no less) and one

Mohammed Azghar. In his judgment delivered on March 18, 1886, the district

judge, Colonel F E A Chamier (a Briton) recorded as follows:

'I visited the land in dispute yesterday in the presence of all parties.

'I found that the masjid built by Emperor Babar stands on the border of the town

of Ayodhya, that is to say to the West and South. It is clear of habitations. It

is most unfortunate that a masjid should have been built on land specially held

sacred by the Hindus, but as that event occurred 356 years ago, it is too late

now to remedy the grievance. All that can be done is to maintain the parties in

status quo. In such a case as the present one any innovation could cause more

harm and derangement of order than benefit.'

Thus, the Hindus won the legal case exactly a week more than 116 years ago, but

were denied their Ram temple for the very same reasons that have been harboured

by Muslim-appeasing pseudo-secularists of India whose 'hate Hindu' mentality is

now openly pronounced by senior English-language journalists. And yet, these

'secularists' of pink and other hues want the VHP to proclaim that it will

abide by the court verdict -- whatever it be.

Judicial proceedings in the Ram Janambhoomi were recommenced three years after

the British had left Indians completely free to take their own decisions in

accordance with their own Constitution which then did not have the much misused

and abused word 'secular' in its Preamble.

After the idols of Sri Ram appeared in the Babri structure on the night of

December 22/23 in 1949, a Hindu lawyer, Gopal Visharad, filed a suit on January

15, 1950, before the civil judge, Faizabad, praying for 'an injunction

restraining the Government of UP, other civil officials and five other Muslims

from removing those idols, closing the passage or interfering with [them] in

any way and permitting the Pooja and Darshan of Sri Rama with due ceremony and

ritual.'

Paramhans Ramchandra filed a similar suit. Both injunctions were granted in the

combined suit. On appeal, this order was confirmed on March 3, 1951, by the

district court and then by a division bench of the Allahabad high court on

November 26, 1953. In fact, the high court directed in 1955 that the case be

disposed of 'at once'. The district court didn't respect its superior's order

for 34 years. Yet, the 'secularists' want the VHP to respect the court verdict,

whatever it is and whenever it is.

Ultimately, all the five cases in process then were withdrawn by the high court

from the district court to itself on July 10, 1989 -- in response to an

application to that effect made by the UP government... two years earlier! The

application for a special bench of three judges was also approved then.

Of those five pending cases, the one that has been made the 'leading suit' is

the only one filed by the Muslims. The Sunni Waqf Board (a waqf is a trust that

controls the property of Islamic institutions) did that in the Faizabad district

court on December 8, 1961. It wanted the court to declare the Babri structure a

mosque that was Muslim property, the possession of which had to be delivered to

them by removing the idols and other articles placed there by the Hindus. Its

suit also wanted the return of the graveyard, 'Ganj Shahidan', at the gate of

the Janmasthan where 75 Muslims are recorded to have been buried in 1855; that

was when the Hindus made a counterattack on the Mussalmans who had occupied the

Janmasthan by force and had made a desperate assault on the nearby Hanuman

'garhi'.

This Muslim suit was in response to the one filed by Visharad and Paramhans on

January 15, 1950, wherein the injunctions they had requested had been upheld by

the high court in 1955, as seen earlier.

This waqf board suit was frivolous, to say the least. First, while the statute

of limitations for wresting title of property lost by adverse possession is six

years, the waqf board's case was filed 11 years and 360 days after the Ram idols

had been placed in the Babri structure. Secondly, the city civil judge of

Faizabad had given a preliminary finding on April 21, 1966, that the Babri

structure was not a waqf property because no proper notification under the law

had been made declaring it to be a Waqf property. Thirdly, under Islamic law,

only the muttawali of the masjid is authorised to initiate legal action, not a

waqf board; what's more, the muttawali who was recognised as such in black and

white by the Sunni Waqf Board on November 25, 1948, and recognised by it as

such in its report of December 10, 1949, was one Mir Java Hassan, who refused

to join the waqf board suit and, in fact, wanted the transfer of the masjid to

his village so that he could offer prayers.

That time-barred waqf board suit still stands in India's courts. First, the high

court refused to hear the limitation as the preliminary issue. When Paramhans

Ramchandra went to the apex court on that refusal, the Supreme Court observed

on January 12, 1990, that 'if the defendants press the contention regarding the

maintainability grounded upon limitation to be raised as a preliminary issue,

the high court which is trying the case will do well to entertain the request'.

Armed with this order, the Hindu defendants asked for preliminary determination

of the limitation issue. On August 22, 1990, the high court refused to decide

any issue as the preliminary issue -- without hearing the defendants' arguments

on merit.

This refusal of the high court to hear the limitation as the preliminary issue

is the subject of a special leave petition that has been in the Supreme Court

from September 1990. Thus, instead of wanting the outright dismissal of the

waqf board's flippant suit, the VHP must patiently, calmly, and respectfully

await the verdict on it of the apex court, whatever it be, and whenever it be.

The fifth of the legal suit pending with the special bench of the Allahabad high

court is the one filed by a former justice of the Allahabad high court, Deoki

Nandan, as a friend and on behalf of Lord Ram and his devotees. He prayed for

declaration of the title and property in favour of the deity. That was on July

1, 1989.

In the very first post-Independence suit of January 1950, the plaintiff as well

as the five defendants died 10 years ago while in the second suit of 1950, only

the plaintiff, Paramhans Ramachandra, is alive, all of 92 years. He is the one

who, reacting to the Allahabad high court's refusal to hear the limitation

issue of the waqf board's case as a preliminary issue, personally applied to

it, on August 23, 1990, for withdrawal of his suit that had remained undecided,

even by the special bench, since it was filed in January 1950.

He also orally told that court then that he was withdrawing the litigation

completely and leaving the matter entirely in the hands of Bhagwan Sri Ram. But

the 'secularists' want the VHP to await and abide by the court verdict, whatever

it be, and whenever it be.

The 'secularists' want the VHP to be happy now that that special bench has

heeded the UP government's request to meet every day to 'expedite' the five

pending cases bunched with it. So instead of waiting for another 15 years or so

for it to finish taking all the 230 depositions, it might finish the job in,

say, a year or two. Thereafter, we will have to wait for arguments before we

get the decision. After all, remember that it was on November 7, 1989, that the

special bench had said, 'It is doubtful that some of the questions involved in

the suit are soluble by judicial process.' But if the VHP says that, it will be

hauled over the coals and told to await the verdict, and abide by it, whatever

it be and whenever it be.

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