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CCTVs installed in Moradabad ahead of Ayodhya verdict | CCTV cameras have been installed in different parts of Moradabad district to help police keep a strict vigil, ahead of Tuesday's verdict on the Babri Masjid Ayodhya title case. "CCTV cameras have been installed in different parts of the city. These cameras
are being controlled and monitored from the nearest police station. As this system
is Internet-based, higher authorities can also view the surveillance. Moreover
they can also operate the cameras simply through their mouse," said B.P. Jogdand,
Deputy Inspector General of Police. "We would maintain a separate log for the
CCTV recordings. All the recordings would be preserved and kept till a definite
time period. Authorities can also save the required CCTV recordings through their
system or laptop," he added. The Supreme Court on Thursday deferred the
Ayodhya
verdict till September 28. The apex court has sent notice to all parties involved
in Ayodhya title dispute case. Earlier on Wednesday, the apex court refused to
hear a plea to defer the Ayodhya verdict that was scheduled to be delivered on
September 24. An apex court Bench refused to hear the petition filed by retired
bureaucrat Ramesh Chandra Tripathi and said the matter would be taken up by
another
bench. Tripathi, who had earlier lost his plea before the Allahabad High Court,
approached the apex court, saying the verdict should be deferred till the end
of the Commonwealth Games. The petition also says that a large number of forces
were needed to contain possible fallout as the verdict may result in communal
tension, but the forces are busy in Commonwealth Games, Jammu and Kashmir and
Bihar elections. The Special Bench of the Allahabad High Court had on September
17 rejected a plea for deferment of the verdict and imposed a heavy fine on Tripathi.
The court had earlier reserved its judgment on July 26 in connection with the
60-year-old title suit. The High Court had also imposed ''exemplary costs'' of
Rs. 50,000 terming Tripathi's effort for an out-of-court settlement of the dispute
as a ''mischievous attempt''. On July 27, the court took the initiative for an
amicable solution to the dispute when it called on counsel for the contending
parties to go into the possibility. But no headway was made. The demolition of
the 16th century mosque triggered widespread communal riots across the country
in 1992-93.
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