Temple Bill passed by both houses of Legislature
The Karnataka Hindu Religious Institutions and Charitable Endowments (Amendment) Bill, 2024, will now be sent to the governor for his assent, following which it will become law.
PTI
Bengaluru, 29 Feb
A bill that sought to collect funds
from temples with over Rs 10 lakh annual income, which was defeated by the Opposition
BJP-JD(S) combine in the legislative council last week, was taken up for
reconsideration and passed by both houses of the legislature on Thursday.
The Karnataka Hindu Religious
Institutions and Charitable Endowments (Amendment) Bill, 2024, will now be sent
to the governor for his assent, following which it will become law.
The bill was defeated by a voice
vote on 23 February in the upper house,
where the Opposition has a majority, after it was passed by the Assembly on 21 February.
After the bill was reconsidered and passed by the legislative assembly once
again on Thursday, it was sent to the legislative council, where too it got
passed, a senior official from the lower house said.
The council passed the bill it had
rejected last week amidst a din, as Opposition BJP and JD(S) members protested
in the house against the government over the alleged pro-Pakistan slogans
chanted in the Assembly.
Piloting the bill in the Assembly
on Thursday, Muzrai Minister Ramalinga Reddy said: "The bill was passed by
the assembly earlier, but was defeated in the council. I request the assembly
to once again pass the bill."
Speaker UT Khader then put the bill
for vote and it was passed by a voice vote.
'Muzrai' refers to grants made by
the government for religious and charitable purposes as well as the upkeep of
religious and charitable institutions, according to the Karnataka Government
Gazetteer. The department of Religious and Charitable Endowments is, hence,
popularly known as the Muzrai department. It administers about 35,000 Hindu
religious institutions which receive grants from the Government of Karnataka.
The Opposition BJP and the JD(S)
were not present in the assembly when the bill was passed on Thursday, as they
had staged a walkout earlier in the day, demanding the Congress government's
resignation for its "inaction" in nabbing the culprits who allegedly
shouted the 'Pakistan zindabad' slogans after Congress member Syed Naseer
Hussain was declared elected to the Rajya Sabha.
The Muzrai department's amendment
bill had created a huge controversy, as it angered the opposition, especially
the BJP, which claimed that the Congress government was trying to fill its
"empty coffers" with temple money.
The Congress then sought to turn
the tables on the saffron party, pointing out that it had effected an amendment
in 2011 to seek funds from high-income Hindu shrines.
The bill among other things,
proposes to collect five per cent from temples whose gross income is between Rs
10 lakh and less than Rs 1 crore, and 10 per cent from temples whose income is
above Rs one crore, to be put into a Common Pool Fund, administered by 'Rajya
Dharmika Parishath'.
The Common Poll Fund is proposed to
be used for the welfare of archakas' (priests) and the upkeep of 'C' category
temples (state controlled) whose annual income is less than Rs 5 lakh. The act
that was earlier amended in 2011 had made way for five per cent of the net
income of temples with annual income between Rs five lakh and Rs 10 lakh, and
10 per cent of the net income of temples with annual income of over Rs 10 lakh
to come into the fund.
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