Today, the Delhi High Court rejected a plea challenging the previous orders of the Single-bench Court refused to interfere with the demolition of a 55-year-old Kali temple which was found to obstruct the traffic flow at Mayapuri Chowk, Delhi.
A division bench comprising of Chief Justice Satish Chandra Sharma and Justice Subramonium Prasad refused to permit more time for shifting the idols and other religious objects from the temple to other temples.
“No further time. Very sorry, we are dismissing it,” the bench said.
The Court passed the order on an appeal by Durga P Mishra, the priest and the caretaker of the temple, who had challenged the single judge’s May 11 order.
Mishra had also sought the quashing of an April 25 notice issued by the Public Works Department (PWD) as well as the minutes of the meeting of the Religious Committee that took the decision to demolish the Kali Mata Mandir.
Advocate Sunil Fernandes, the Counsel for Mishra, submitted that the single judge “did not apply its mind properly” and that they were not given a proper hearing in the matter.
“Due process ought to be followed. The single judge did not apply their mind properly. We are there for the last 55 years. We are not the cause of traffic congestion. We are only saying please conduct a proper inquiry,” he argued.
As the bench was not inclined to allow the appeal, the lawyer urged that they be given at least a month’s time to remove the idols and other religious objects from the temple.
The bench, however, turned down the request.
The single judge, in its May 11 order, had given a week’s time to the priest to shift the idols and other religious objects from the temple to other temples, as directed by the Religious Committee in the matter. It had said that the PWD was free to carry out the demolition after May 20.
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