14. Ram Janmabhoom vivad:
A special CBI court in
Lucknow on September 30, 2020, delivered the judgment on the 1992 Babri Masjid
demolition case, acquitting all those accused of conspiracy. Few cases have captured public attention,
polarised watchers and dragged on for longer than the this one has. The mosque in Ayodhya was demolished on
December 6, by ‘kar sevaks’ who claimed that an ancient Ram temple stood at the
same site. In 2019, a five-judge
Constitution bench of the top court had ruled that the 2.77-acre land claimed
by both Hindus and Muslims would be handed over to a trust for the building of
a temple. Among accused are several
leaders of the Bharatiya Janata Party, in power at the Centre today. The 32
accused include former deputy prime minister L.K. Advani, along with Murli
Manohar Joshi, Kalyan Singh and Uma Bharti, who have all been asked to be
present in court.
The following timeline
attempts to offer an idea of the events that led to the demolition and those
that shaped how it will be seen in history:
1528: The Babri Masjid is
built in Ayodhya by Mir Baqi, upon the instructions of the Mughal emperor,
Babur.
1855: Sunni Muslims claim
the temple of Hanumangarhi in Ayodhya is built on the site of a destroyed
mosque. Clashes begin between them and Bairais, but Nawad Wajid Ali Shah is
believed to have intervened on behalf of the temple to maintain peace.
1859: The British
administration erects a fence around Babri Masjid, as the belief that the
mosque is the birthplace of Ram gains currency. Hindus are allowed to worship
in the outer court.
1885: Mahant Raghubir
Das’s plea to build a worshipping platform in this outer courtyard is rejected
by a local court.
March 1934: The mosque and
its dome sustain damages during violence between Hindus and Muslims. The
British government takes up rebuilding efforts.
1947: A local court rules
that it is the Sunni Waqf Board and not the Shia Waqf Board that can hold sway
over the Babri Masjid.
December 22, 1949:
District Magistrate K.K. Nayar refuses to remove idols of Ram placed inside the
mosque by Hindu Mahasabha members, citing possibility of riots. Nayar
eventually joins the Jan Sangh and becomes an MP. The mosque comes under lock
and key
1950: Muslim and Hindu
parties file suits in Faizabad court, asking for permission for namaz and
prayers, respectively. The inner courtyard remains locked. An interim
injunction allows a pujari in but forbids entry to others.
1959: A third suit is
filed in the same court by the Nirmohi Akhara, headed by Mahant Bhaskar Das,
which asks for pujas to be conducted even on the disputed grounds.
1961: The UP Sunni Central
Waqf Board files a fourth suit in the same court, asking for Muslims to be
allowed to pray in the mosque. 1981: The
above board files for possession of the site.
1984: As the ‘Ram
Janmabhoomi’ movement gathers steam, L.K. Advani of the new political player
Bharatiya Janata Party, becomes its de facto leader. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad
leads a Shriram-Janaki rath yatra from Sitamarhi in Bihar to Delhi. Six similar
yatras take place in Uttar Pradesh. BJP wins only two seats out of 541 in the
Lok Sabha polls.
1986: A district judge —
according to historian Ramachandra Guha, under orders from the PMO — directs
that the Babri Masjid gates be unlocked and Hindus be allowed to worship there.
In protest, Muslims set up the Babri Masjid Action Committee. Parliament passes
the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986, effectively
overturning the Supreme Court verdict in the Shah Bano case, a crucial factor
that paved the way for BJP’s participation in the Ayodhya movement, according
to Advani, who became party chief in that year..
1989: Allahabad high court
orders maintenance of status quo with respect to the Babri Masjid after a fresh
suit is filed by VHP vice-president and former judge of the court Deoki Nandan
Agarwal seeking to become the “sakha” or friend of the deity and its birthplace
in the title suits
November 9, 1989: Rajiv
Gandhi government allows the VHP to perform shilanyas (laying of the foundation
stone) for the Ram temple on November 9, 1989, on the disputed land. September 25, 1990: BJP President L.K. Advani
launches his Rath Yatra from Somnath to Ayodhya to gather support for the Ram
temple. He is arrested in Samastipur in Bihar by the government of Lalu Prasad
Yadav in November, 1990. Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader Ashok Singhal is also
arrested. October 30, 1990: Kar sevaks
clash with the police on their way to Ayodhya’s Babri Masjid and at least 20
are killed. Communal clashes rock Uttar Pradesh. 1991: BJP, which had withdrawn support to the
V.P. Singh government, emerges as the second-largest party with 121 seats in
the Lok Sabha following the general elections. In Uttar Pradesh, Kalyan Singh
heads the BJP government.
December 6, 1992: A crowd
of almost 150,000 people gather to listen to speeches by BJP and the Vishwa
Hindu Parishad (VHP) leaders – including LK Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi – at
the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya. The crowd later storms the mosque and demolishes
it in a few hours. The demolition occurred despite assurances from the state
government to the Supreme Court that the mosque would not be harmed.
After the demolition of
the Babri Masjid, on the evening of December 6, 1992, kar sevaks started
attacking Muslim residents of Ayodhya, ransacking and demolishing their houses.
Eighteen Muslims were murdered, almost all their houses and shops were torched and
destroyed, including 23 local mosques. Additionally, riots broke out in
different parts of the country, including Mumbai, and around 2,000 people were
killed.
Two FIRs are filed, one
against kar sevaks for the demolition and the other against the likes of
Advani, Joshi and Bharti, for the communal speeches they delivered that led to
the demolition.
December 8, 1992: Muslims
in Pakistan attack more than 30 Hindu temples. Pakistan government closes
offices and schools for a day in protest against the destruction of the mosque
in India. December 16, 1992: The
Narasimha Rao government sets up the Liberhan Commission to investigate the
case. 1993: The Centre acquires 67.703
acres of land in and around the Babri Masjid under the newly passed
‘Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act’. CBI takes over the criminal case.
A chargesheet is filed against Advani and 19 others for inciting the demolition.
1994: The Supreme Court
finds UP chief minister Kalyan Singh guilty, sentences him to token
imprisonment of one day with a fine of Rs 20,000.
2001: An NDA government is
at the Centre now. A special CBI court drops proceedings and conspiracy charges
against the accused including Advani, M.M. Joshi, Uma Bharti, Bal Thackeray and
others. 2002: PM Vajpayee sets up an
‘Ayodhya cell’ in his office and appoints a senior official, Shatrughan Singh,
to hold talks with Hindu and Muslim leaders.
While BJP does not commit itself to a Ram temple in its Uttar Pradesh
assembly election manifesto, VHP sets a deadline of March 15 to begin
construction. Hundreds of volunteers converge on site. The Allahabad high court directs the
Archaeological Survey of India to excavate the Babri Masjid site to determine
if a temple lay underneath.
2003: The ASI submits a
report, refuted by archaeologists and historians, saying that there is evidence
of a 10th century temple beneath the mosque.
CBI special court rules that seven Hindutva leaders should stand trial
for inciting the destruction of the Babri Mosque, but no charges are brought
against Advani, now deputy prime minister, who was also at the site in 1992. 2004: The court rules that the earlier order which
exonerated Advani for his role in the destruction of the mosque should be
reviewed.
The Commission finds
several BJP leaders like Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Lal Krishna Advani, Murli
Manohar Joshi, Kalyan Singh, Pramod Mahajan, Uma Bharti and Vijayaraje Scindia,
and VHP leaders like Giriraj Kishore and Ashok Singhal and Shiv Sena chief Bal
Thackeray and former RSS leader K. N. Govindacharya culpable in the demolition
of the mosque.
2010: Allahabad high court
rules that the disputed land in Ayodhya where the Babri Masjid was shall be
divided into three parts. A two-thirds portion is to be shared by two Hindu
plaintiffs and one-third will be given to the Sunni Muslim Waqf Board.
2011: Supreme Court
suspends high court ruling after Hindu and Muslim plaintiffs appeal against the
verdict.
2016: BJP MP Subramanian
Swamy files plea in Supreme Court seeking construction of a Ram temple at the
Babri Masjid site. The prime minister was in 2016- Narendra Modi, of the BJP. The oldest litigant in the Babri Masjid case,
Mohammad Hashim Ansari, dies at 95 years of age.
2017: Adityanath, founder
of the Hindu Yuva Vahini, takes oath as chief minister of Uttar Pradesh.
Supreme Court rules that
L.K. Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi and Union minister Uma Bharti, in addition to
other BJP members and kar sevaks, will face charges of criminal conspiracy in
the Babri Masjid demolition case. Kalyan Singh was excluded from the list
because he held the post of the governor of Rajasthan. Several of the original
accused, including Shiv Sena leader Bal Thackeray, had died during the trial. The court orders that the trial, to be held
in Lucknow, be completed in two years. The
special CBI court frames charges against the BJP leaders but grants them bail.
2018: Supreme Court starts
hearing the civil appeals in the title dispute, rejects all interim pleas,
including Swamy’s, seeking to intervene as parties in the case. It also declines to refer the case to a
five-judge Constitution bench.
2019: Supreme Court sets
up a five-judge Constitution Bench to hear the title dispute, headed by Chief
Justice Ranjan Gogoi and comprising Justices S.A. Bobde, N.V. Ramana, U.U.
Lalit and D.Y. Chandrachud. Justice U.U. Lalit recuses himself. A new bench
comprising CJI Gogoi and Justices S.A Bobde, D.Y. Chandrachud, Ashok Bhushan
and S.A. Nazeer is constituted to hear the case. The special judge holding the trial in the
Babri Masjid demolition case moves the Supreme Court seeking six more months to
conclude the trial. October 14, 2019:
The Ayodhya district administration imposes Section 144 until December 10 in
view of the imminent Supreme Court verdict in the case.
October 16, 2019: In a
surprise development on the last day of the hearings, the primary Muslim
litigant in the title dispute case informs the Supreme Court that it is willing
to drop its appeals in the matter – and its claims to the land on which the
historic Babri Masjid stood for centuries before it was demolished by Hindutva
activists and leaders in 1992 – provided the Centre is willing to guarantee
that all other places of worship in India will be protected from similar
encroachment. Other Muslim plaintiffs dissociate themselves from this offer,
which in any case was not accepted by the main Hindu plaintiff,- VHP. November 8, 2019: Supreme Court registrar
says verdict in the title suit will be delivered at 10:30 am on November 9,
2019. November 9, 2019: The Supreme
Court pronounced its “unanimous” verdict in the Ayodhya title dispute case,
saying that the Hindu parties will be given the disputed land where the Babri
Masjid once stood. The Sunni Waqf Board, the biggest Muslim litigant in the
case, will be given five acres at a separate “prominent” location in Ayodhya.
May 8, 2020: The Supreme
Court extends by three months the time for completion of trial in the
demolition case and says that judgment should be delivered by August 31. This
is extended in August by a month.
August 5, 2020: A bhoomi
pujan of the Ram Temple is conducted at the Babri Masjid demolition site,
headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The ceremony is telecast on several
news channels. None of the original accused BJP leaders attend.
It was expected that there
could be a political gain and dispute in the case should benefits many people
and political parties in 2024, but no political party could get a gain because of
it.
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