SC halts court proceedings in Sambhal mosque dispute
Supreme Court directed UP govt to maintain peace and harmony in violence-hit town
PTI
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Devotees arrive at Shahi Jama Masjid to offer prayers, in Sambhal on Friday. PHOTO: PTI
New Delhi, 29 Nov
The Supreme Court on Friday
directed a Sambhal trial court to temporarily halt proceedings in the case over
the Mughal-era Shahi Jama Masjid and its survey at Chandausi while directing
the UP government to maintain peace and harmony in the violence-hit town.
On 19 November, a court of civil
judge (senior division) of Sambhal passed an ex-parte order for a survey of the
mosque by an advocate commissioner after taking note of a plea of the Hindu
side that claimed the mosque was built by Mughal emperor Babur in 1526 after
demolishing a temple.
On 24 November, violence gripped
the area, post the order, snuffing out four lives.
On Friday, a bench comprising Chief
Justice Sanjiv Khanna and Justice Sanjay Kumar emphasised the importance of
maintaining peace in the Sambhal district and instructed that the report
prepared by the court commissioner following the mosque survey be sealed and
not opened until further orders.
It further directed the petition filed by the Shahi Jama Masjid Committee against the trial court's survey order be listed before the Allahabad High Court within three working days. "We feel that the petitioner (mosque committee) must challenge the order dated 19 November, 2024 in an appropriate forum. In the meantime, peace and harmony must be maintained. The Additional Solicitor General (KM Natraj appearing for the state government) assures the same. We also observe that in case any revision petition /miscellaneous petition is preferred, the same would be listed within a period of three working days," the CJI wrote in the order.
The order noted that the matter was
fixed before the trial court on 8 January, 2025 and said, "We hope and
trust the trial court will not proceed with the matter till the matter is
listed before the High Court. We clarify we have not expressed any opinion on
the merits of the matter. We are not disposing of the present special leave
petition. Re-list (it) in the week commencing January 6."
Earlier in the day, Sambhal court
Civil Judge Aditya Singh directed the court-appointed commissioner Rakesh Singh
Raghav to submit within 10 days the survey report on the mosque.
Senior advocate Huzefa Ahmadi
represented the mosque committee in the top court. At the outset, the CJI asked
Ahmadi how a plea was moved straightaway in the Supreme Court against the
impugned order of a district civil court and advised him to take the legal
recourse in the high court.
Ahmadi submitted the trial court’s
order had the potential to cause "great mischief" and urged the top court
to intervene.
The bench, however, advised the
committee to approach the high court under Article 227 of the Constitution,
which provides supervisory powers over lower courts. "We may have some
reservations on the order, but is it not amenable to Article 227? You have to
approach the appropriate forum,” the CJI observed.
Expressing concern about community
harmony, the CJI said, "Peace and harmony have to be maintained. We don’t
want anything to happen...we have to be absolutely, totally neutral and ensure
nothing wrong is done.”
The bench asked the state
administration to set up a peace committee having members from both the
communities.
ASG KM Nataraj assured the bench of
the state’s commitment to maintain peace in the area.
The management committee of
Sambhal's Shahi Jama Masjid moved the Supreme Court on 28 November, challenging
the 19 November order of the district court directing survey of the Mughal-era
mosque while seeking an ex-parte stay on the operation of the November 19 order
passed by the civil judge.
Tensions brewed in UP's Sambhal
after 19 November, when the court-ordered survey of the Shahi Jama Masjid was
carried out following claims that a Harihar temple previously stood at the
site. On 24 November, protesters gathered near the mosque and clashed with the
security personnel, leading to stone pelting and arson, leaving four dead and
several injured.
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