Bengaluru: el Superior Court of Karnataka On Tuesday he granted permission to the Hindus to hold the Shivalinga located within the facilities of Mashak Dargah ladle In Aland during Mahashivrati. The ruling defends an earlier order of the Karnataka Waqf court, which described a structured schedule for religious observances on the site.
According to the Court’s directive, members of the Muslim community may carry out rituals related to USA from 8 am to 12 pm meanwhile, between 2 pm and 6 pm, Hindu devotees may offer sentences to the Raghava Chaitanya Shivalingawhich is within Dargah’s facilities.
The Superior Court granted permission for 15 people to enter Dargah to hold the bid.
The sanctuary, associated with a saint suffering from the fourteenth century and the Hindu Holy of Raghava Chaitanya of the fifteenth century, has historically been a place of shared cult. However, tensions exploded in 2022 when disputes about religious rights in Dargah emerged, which led to communal disturbances. To avoid disturbances this year, the district administration has imposed section 144 of the CRPC in Aland, restricting public meetings.
Security has hardened significantly, and the police established 12 control points and deployed drones for surveillance. The police superintendent Isha Pant clarified that, although the authorities did not enforce commercial closures, many local merchants voluntarily closed their establishments as a precautionary measure.
The Superior Court has emphasized that both communities must strictly adhere to the designated time spaces and maintain the status quo of the property. The authorities have been addressed to avoid unauthorized alterations on the site during rituals. The attached commissioner Yeshwanth Gurukar and the officials responsible for enforcing the law have had the task of guaranteeing the execution without problems of the court while maintaining the law and order in the city.