Plea For ASI Survey Of Gyanvapi Mosque's Blocked Cellars | Varanasi Court Grants Time Till Feb 28 To Mosque Committee To File Objections

LIVELAW NEWS NETWORK

15 Feb 2024 9:34 AM GMT

  • Plea For ASI Survey Of Gyanvapi Mosques Blocked Cellars | Varanasi Court Grants Time Till Feb 28 To Mosque Committee To File Objections

    A court in Varanasi District of Uttar Pradesh today granted time till February 28 to Anjuman Intezamia Mosque Committee (which manages Gyanvapi Mosque in Varanasi) to file its objections to the application seeking a direction to the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) to conduct a thorough survey of the unreached/blocked cellars (Tehkhane) within the Gyanvapi Mosque premises.Addl. District...

    A court in Varanasi District of Uttar Pradesh today granted time till February 28 to Anjuman Intezamia Mosque Committee (which manages Gyanvapi Mosque in Varanasi) to file its objections to the application seeking a direction to the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) to conduct a thorough survey of the unreached/blocked cellars (Tehkhane) within the Gyanvapi Mosque premises.

    Addl. District & Sessions Judge Varanasi Anil Kumar-V granted time to the Mosque committee after its counsel orally mentioned that the committee intended to oppose the plea for ASI Survey of the blocked cellars.

    For context, the application, filed under Section 75 (e) and Order 26 Rule 10A r/w Section 151 of CPC, had been moved by Rakhi Singh (through Advocate Saurabh Tiwari), who is plaintiff no. 1 in the Shringar Gauri Worshipping suit 2022 (presently pending before the Varanasi Court).

    In her application, Singh has argued that the survey of the remaining cellars is necessary to ascertain the religious character of the property in question (Gyanvapi premises). The application submits that within the Gyanvapi premises, cellar no. N1 to N5 (in the north) and S1 to S3 (in the south) exist and cellars nos. N1 and S1 are completely not accessed because their entrances are blocked.

    Referring to the recent report of the ASI (pertaining to the Scientific survey of the Gyanvapi Mosque), Singh has submitted that since the four entrances on the western wall of N2 which give access to N1 are all blocked, nothing is known of its dimensions or inner arrangement, however, the entrances measure approximately 1.75m in length and 1.11 m in width.

    In her plea, she has asserted that some cellars inside the mosque premises have not been surveyed because of their entrance bein blocked and therefore, the ASI may be directed to survey the cellars without causing any damage to the structure in question.

    It may be noted that the District judge last week allowed regular worship of Hindu deities in the southern cellar of Varanasi's Gyanvapi Masjid by a family of priests that used to perform rituals there before 1993. Shortly after the Varanasi District Judge's order, the District Magistrate MS Rajalingam, along with other government officials, entered the mosque complex through gate number 4 of the Kashi Corridor and the officials spent around two hours inside the complex.

    Thereafter, the basement/tehkhana was unlocked, and regular worship commenced in the area. Devotees were observed congregating outside 'Vyas Ji ka Tahkhana.'

    The Anjuman Intezamia Masajid Committee (which manages Gyanvpai mosque) has already moved the Allahabad High Court challenging the Varanasi District Court's order. The High Court reserved its verdict in the matter today.

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