Policemen deployed to protect Hindu temple in Pak

Wednesday 27th January 2021 05:41 EST
 

Peshawar: Policemen were deployed to protect a Hindu temple in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, days after the minority community demanded protection for the place of worship fearing an attack by some mischievous elements who wanted to occupy its land.

The move comes after officials of the district evacuee property trust committee and district revenue in a meeting with deputy commissioner, Abbottabad, held that Havelian temple in the district is a historic religious structure and needs protection. On the recommendations of the officials, deputy commissioner Mughees Sanaullah directed deployment of police. “A handful of mischievous elements wanted to occupy the temple land in Havelian city to spread anarchy in the country,” he said. The officials also held that the lease owner of the temple could neither demolish nor make any alterations in it or use the structure for any commercial purpose.

The officials informed that as per District Revenue Record, the temple existed at the land which was leased out to one Sardar Ramzan in 2013. Before that, the building was also used by other people for different purposes. In December, a temple in Terri village in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Karak district was attacked by a mob after members of the Hindu community received permission from local authorities to renovate its decades-old building. The mob had demolished the newly constructed work alongside the old structure. The attack on the temple by members of radical Jamiat Ulema-e- Islam party (Fazal ur Rehman group) drew strong condemnation from human rights activists and the minority Hindu community leaders, prompting the Supreme Court to order its reconstruction.


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