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Supreme Court Pauses Surveys Of Places Of Worship, Orders Centre To Reply

New Delhi: 

Ongoing surveys of places of worship, including mosques, will be paused, the Supreme Court said Thursday as it began hearing petitions challenging certain provisions of the Places of Worship Act.

Among the six petitions facing the court today was one by the BJP’s Subramanian Swamy. The main petition was filed four years ago after which the government was told to respond, but never did.

On the other side, certain petitions sought enforcement of the Act, which prohibits filing a lawsuit to reclaim a place of worship or seek a change in character that prevailed on August 15, 1947.

Among those in this camp are a raft of MPs and political parties, including Jitendra Awhad from Sharad Pawar’s NCP faction and the RJD’s Manoj Kumar Jha, as well as Tamil Nadu’s ruling DMK.

In an order that will bring relief for petitioners in other cases – many of whom who had sought to question court-ordered surveys of mosques, on claims they were built over demolished Hindu temples – the lower courts were also directed to not pass any order or hear any new cases.

The directive to lower courts to not issue orders, interim or final, in pending cases includes those concerning the Gyanvapi Mosque, the Mathura Shahi Idgah, and the Sambhal Masjid; each faces claims by Hindu petitioners that the existing structure was built over what was once a Hindu temple.

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