September 28, 2010

THE BABRI MOSQUE VERSUS THE AYODHYA TEMPLE: INDIA'S SUPREME COURT TO RULE ON THEIR 150 YEAR OLD VERSION OF THE GROUND ZERO MOSQUE: RIOTS EXPECTED

  • IN 1527, THE MUSLIM CONQUERORS OF INDIA BUILT A VICTORY MOSQUE ON TOP OF A HINDU TEMPLE MARKING THE PLACE OF RAMA'S BIRTH.
  • IN 1992 HINDUS DESTROYED IT IN A RIOT INVOLVING 150,000 PEOPLE. MORE THAN 2000 PEOPLE WERE KILLED.
  • FOR YEARS, HINDUS AND MUSLIMS HAVE TAKEN THEIR FIGHT TO INDIA'S NOTORIOUSLY SLOW COURTS - AND A DECISION IS COMING...
Indian Court to choose Hindus or Muslims for holy site
Violent riots expected after verdict on 150-year-old dispute: Whether Hindu or Muslims will control holy site in Ayodhya.

The Indian Supreme Court rejected Tuesday a plea to delay judgment on whether Hindus or Muslims should control a disputed holy site, clearing the way for a verdict in the explosive case later this week.

The fight over the compound in the central Indian town of Ayodhya has shaken the core of modern India and led to repeated outbreaks of communal violence that killed thousands of people.

A lower court had been scheduled to issue its ruling in the 60-year-old case last Friday on whether the site should be given to the Hindu community to build a temple to the god Rama or returned to the Muslim community to rebuild the 16th-century Babri Mosque.

But the Supreme Court deferred that ruling so it could hear arguments Tuesday on whether a decision on the dispute, which dates back more than 150 years, should be delayed further to allow the two communities a chance to settle it amicably.

"I told the court during arguments that there was no chance of a settlement. The High Court should be allowed to pronounce its judgment," said Zaffaryab Jilani, a lawyer for the Sunni Waqf Board, a Muslim organization that was part of the original suit.

On Tuesday afternoon the court dismissed the motion without giving any reasons for its decision, said Mukul Rohatgi, a lawyer who argued for the delay.

The case has been stuck in India's famously sluggish court system for so long that most of the original petitioners have died awaiting a decision.

The Allahabad High Court will issue its verdict Thursday afternoon, said Hari Shankar Dubey, a court official. The court was in a rush to announce the decision before one of the judges on the panel is set to retire at the end of the week, which could force the court to put together a new panel and hear the case from the beginning.

The government fears that any verdict could set off a repeat of the communal violence that killed 2,000 people in nationwide rioting in 1992 after a mob of Hindu extremists descended on Ayodhya and tore down the Babri Mosque.
THE HINDUS ARE ATTEMPTING TO UNDO THE DESECRATION OF THEIR HOLY SITE.

I HOPE AND PRAY THE GROUND ZERO MOSQUE IS NEVER BUILT; IF IT IS BUILT, I PREDICT A SIMILAR RESULT: MASSIVE RIOTS AND MANY DEAD.

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