Karnataka Waqf Minister Vows No Temple, School Land Takeovers

Karnataka's Waqf Minister B.Z. Zameer Ahmad Khan has assured the Legislative Assembly that the Waqf Board will not target properties belonging to temples or educational institutions. He clarified that the board's focus is solely on recovering Waqf lands encroached upon by private parties, with most encroachers being from the Muslim community. The statement came in response to questions from Congress MLA M.Y. Patil and criticism from BJP Leader of Opposition R. Ashoka, who raised concerns about historical claims on lands like a school attended by Sir M. Visvesvaraya. The minister defended the formation of Waqf Lok Adalats to address encroachments, stating the issue of prominent properties like Windsor Manor hotel is sub judice in the Supreme Court.

Key Points: Karnataka Waqf Board Won't Meddle With Temple, School Lands

  • Waqf Board to avoid temple/school lands
  • Focus on private encroachments on Waqf land
  • 17,969 acres of Waqf land encroached
  • BJP opposition raises concerns over claims
3 min read

We will not meddle with temple, school properties: K'taka Waqf Minister

Minister Zameer Ahmad Khan clarifies Waqf focus is on private encroachments, not temple or school properties, amid political debate in Assembly.

"We will not meddle with any properties belonging to temples. We will also not touch the properties of schools. - B.Z. Zameer Ahmad Khan"

Bengaluru, March 16

Minister for Waqf and Housing B.Z. Zameer Ahmad Khan stated that the Waqf Board will not meddle with any properties attached to temples or schools.

He made the statement in the Legislative Assembly on Monday while answering a question by senior Congress MLA M.Y. Patil.

Minister Zameer said, "I have clearly stated that we will not meddle with any properties belonging to temples. We will also not touch the properties of schools or educational institutions."

"We are only focussed on private parties encroaching upon Waqf properties. In most cases, the encroachers are Muslims," he said.

Zameer said that across the state, Waqf Board properties are estimated to cover 1.12 lakh acres. However, the total land currently available with the Waqf Board is only 24,054 acres.

About 17,580 acres of land has been encroached upon, 47,263 acres went under Inam Abolition, and 23,627 acres went under the Land Reforms Act, he said.

"After the Congress-led government assumed office in Karnataka, I formed Waqf Lok Adalats to identify and recover Waqf properties that have been encroached upon," he said.

He said that Leader of the Opposition, R. Ashoka, and other BJP leaders must understand that the reason for forming the Waqf Adalats is to address the issue of encroachment on Waqf properties.

"The total Waqf properties are over 1,12,860 acres. These are not properties given by the government. They were donated by private individuals for the welfare of the community. Out of this, about 17,969 acres have been encroached upon," Minister Zameer stated.

"The encroachments have not been carried out by temple managements or others. The encroachers are from the Muslim community," he said.

"To remove encroachments, I formed Waqf Adalats. However, the BJP created a huge controversy during the Belagavi Winter Session. That is why I am clarifying this," Minister Zameer said.

R. Ashoka said, "I know that in Kalaburagi and surrounding areas, Muslims have encroached upon Waqf properties. That is not the question we raised."

"We questioned the Waqf Board claiming properties such as the government school where poineering Indian civil engineer, Sir M. Visvesvaraya studied and temple lands as Waqf properties," he said.

"Earlier, temple and Waqf lands were donated to farmers and they have been carrying out agriculture on them for generations. If farmers are in possession of the land, it should be left to them irrespective of whether they are Hindus or Muslims," Ashoka said.

"Let there be an investigation into Waqf encroachments. In Bengaluru, the famous Windsor Manor hotel is located on such land. Mr. Zameer, you did not mention it and instead talk about other issues. You do not talk about it at all. Not even once have you mentioned it, perhaps because you go there for coffee and food," Ashoka chided.

Minister Zameer stated that the matter is with the Supreme Court.

Earlier, senior Congress MLA M.Y. Patil raised the issue in the Assembly regarding the encroachment of Waqf properties by private parties during the Question and Answer session.

MLA Patil said that in and around Afzalpur town in Kalaburagi district, documents show that several properties belong to the Waqf. "We are not in a position to take up any government projects and have to look for private land," he said.

"However, these properties are currently in the possession of private parties. They are not under the control of either the Waqf Board or the government," he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the scale of the issue - over 1.12 lakh acres! The Minister admitting that most encroachers are from the Muslim community shows some honesty. But the opposition raises a valid point about historical properties like the school. A balanced, legal approach is needed.
R
Rohit P
Finally, a sensible statement. For too long, these issues are politicized. If the land was donated for community welfare, it should be used for that purpose. But what about farmers who have been tilling the land for generations? They shouldn't suffer. The government must find a humane solution.
A
Ananya R
The Windsor Manor hotel mention is telling. Why is there selective action? The Minister says the matter is in Supreme Court, but the opposition's chiding about "coffee and food" hints at a deeper problem. Accountability should be universal, not just for the small encroachers.
K
Karthik V
Good move to form Lok Adalats. It's a faster way to resolve disputes. The numbers are staggering - only 24k acres available out of 1.12 lakh! The government must recover what's rightfully Waqf property, but as promised, without harming temples or schools. Jai Karnataka!
P
Priyanka N
The core issue is development being stalled, as MLA Patil said. If land records are unclear, how can any project move forward? This isn't about religion, it's about governance. Clear the titles, follow the law, and let progress happen for everyone's benefit.

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