Dr. Mohommad Ayub, President of the Peace party, said that decision has been made based on compromise and not based on pieces of evidence. The peace party is one of the parties which filed the review petition against the Ayodhya verdict.
Seven pleas filed in SC seeking review of Ayodhya verdict
18:46 December 06
17:38 December 06
All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) secretary and lawyer Zafaryab Geelani said that the idols of Ram Lalla placed inside the musjid were not in accordance with the law and the same stand was taken up by the SC.
"The idol. placed in a place which it doesn't own, cannot attain the status of a deity and is not a juristic person," Geelani said.
17:26 December 06
Adv. Vishnu Shankar Jain reacting to the Muslim party's review petitions said that Hindu parties will file a review petition opposing the 5 acres land given to the Muslim parties as compensation.
"It was a civil suit, the SC decided that Hindu parties had the evidence to stake the claim of the ownership of inner and outer courtyard," he said.
"Once the civil suit is decided based on evidence and findings secular principles do not apply in this case," he added.
17:15 December 06
Seven pleas filed in SC seeking review of Ayodhya verdict
New Delhi:Seven petitions were filed in the Supreme Court on Friday seeking review of its November 9 verdict which cleared the way for construction of a Ram Temple at the disputed site in Ayodhya.
A 5-judge bench, headed by the then Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, had in a unanimous verdict on November 9 decreed the entire 2.77 acre disputed land in favour of deity 'Ram Lalla' and also directed the Centre to allot a 5-acre plot to Sunni Waqf Board for building a mosque in Ayodhya.
Seven separate fresh review petitions have been filed by Maulana Mufti Hasbullah, Mohd Umar, Maulana Mahfoozur Rehman and Mishbahuddin, who are supported by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB).
Read: SC gives disputed land to Hindus; directs Centre to allocate alternate land to Muslims
In a press release, the four review petitioners through their counsel M R Shamshad, said that AIMPLB had decided on November 17 that it would support the filing of review pleas in the matter. On December 2, the first review petition in the case was filed by Maulana Syed Ashhad Rashidi, legal heir of original litigant M Siddiq and Uttar Pradesh President of Jamiat Ulama-e-Hind saying that "complete justice" could only be done by directing reconstruction of Babri Masjid.
While key litigant, Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Wakf Board, decided against challenging the verdict, Maulana Syed Ashhad Rashidi has sought review of the verdict on 14 counts.
In his review plea, Maulana Mufti Hasbullah has said that the top court should reconsider the "grave injustice" to a community in a title suit.
"Title could not have been given to Hindu parties on the basis of exclusive possession of entire site which never existed at any point in time with the Hindus since it is admitted that Muslims entered and prayed at the site till December 1949, and later prevented from doing so because of the attachment while unfairly permitting Hindu worship following criminal trespass," Hasbullah said in his plea, which has been settled by senior advocates Rajeev Dhavan and Zafaryab Jilani.
Read: Why is the new Ram temple dependent on Bansi Paharpur?
The plea said that the November 9 verdict "condones serious illegalities of destruction, criminal trespass, and violation of rule of law including damaging the Mosque and eventually destroying it".
"The judgment erred in accepting the juristic personality of the idol entitled it to the 3 domed structure and the courtyard while holding that the idol was illegally and forcibly put there. An idol as deity cannot be simultaneously illegally placed and legally valid to claim the title," Hasbullah said in his plea.
It said since it is undisputed that Muslims were praying on the site till December 16, 1949 and entered the Mosque through the outer courtyard, this fact proves that the Hindus were never in exclusive possession.
"The court erred in not considering that there was a dedication of the mosque which was self-evident from the inscriptions," it said, adding, "the judgment erred in holding that the waqf was not established by 'user' though continuous possession and prayer were shown at all times."
Read: Arshad Madani files review petition in SC against Ayodhya Verdict
It further said, "the judgment under review erred in allotting alternate land of 5 acres to the Sunni Waqf Board under Article 142 even though the same was not pleaded for."
In the first review plea, Rashidi has sought an interim stay on the operation of the verdict in which it had directed the Centre that a trust be formed within three months for construction of the temple at the site.
Read: 'Sacked from Babri case, no longer involved in review,' claims Rajeev Dhavan
Rashidi has also questioned the direction asking the Centre and the Uttar Pradesh government to allot 5-acre land for construction of a mosque at a prominent place in Ayodhya, saying that such a prayer was never made by the Muslim parties.
It was also submitted that despite acknowledging several illegalities committed by the Hindu parties, including the destruction of the mosque at the disputed site, the apex court condoned them and granted the land to them.