Islamabad: A Pakistani court has dismissed three identical petitions challenging the construction of the first Hindu temple in the country's capital.
A single bench of the Islamabad High Court (IHC), comprising Justice Aamer Farooq, delivered the judgement late on Tuesday, making it clear that there was no bar on the Institute of Hindu Panchayat (IHP), which was allotted the land for the construction of the temple, to build it using its own funds.
The court had on Monday reserved the judgement on the matter.
As per plans, the Krishna temple is supposed to come up in a 20,000 sq ft plot in the capital's H-9 administrative division. The groundbreaking ceremony for the temple was performed recently by Parliamentary Secretary on Human Rights Lal Chand Malhi.
The Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q), a ruling ally of Prime Minister Imran Khan's government, had opposed the construction of the temple, asking its coalition partner to scrap the project as it is "against the spirit of Islam".
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The petitioners had asked the court to annul the construction of the temple and allotment of a piece of land by the Capital Development Authority (CDA) for it in Islamabad, pleading that there was no provision for the same in the master plan of the national capital.
The court rejected it saying that it was up to the CDA to decide the purpose of land.