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Supreme Court rejects plea to defer Ayodhya verdict | Rejecting an appeal that sought to defer the Allahabad Court's verdict on Ayodhya-Ramjanambhoomi title issue, the Supreme Court on Tuesday gave its nod to the court's Lucknow Bench to go ahead with its announcement of the
judgment in the case. Retired bureaucrat Ramesh Chandra Tripathi had petitioned
in the court to defer verdict to allow an amicable settlement of the dispute between
the two parties to the issue. The Lucknow Bench now has two days to pronounce
its verdict. Earlier today, the apex court heard a plea seeking deferment of the
Allahabad high court verdict in the Ayodhya title suit case. Attorney General
G E Vahanvati, appearing before a three-judge Special Bench headed by
S.H.Kapadia,
said the most preferred solution to the problem would be settlement but it has
not taken place and the uncertainty, which is prevailing, should not be allowed
to continue. "Settlement, if any possible, we welcome it but we do not want any
uncertainty," he told the bench. The three-judge bench comprised Chief Justice
of India S. H. Kapadia, Justice Aftab Alam and Justice K. S. Radhakrishnan. Earlier,
the hearing started with senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi putting forth arguments
on behalf of a retired bureaucrat Ramesh Chandra Tripathi on why the delivery
of the verdict be postponed and efforts be made to reach an amicable settlement
outside the court. 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's Bench 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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