New Delhi, Mar 22: The Supreme Court is likely to decide today whether senior BJP leaders LK Advani and Murali Manohar Joshi, along with other BJP leaders would face trial in the decades-old Babri mosque demolition case. The court is expected to reveal whether or not conspiracy charges will be revived against Mr Advani, 89, and other leaders like Murli Manohar Joshi and Union Minister Uma Bharti. The charge was dropped by lower courts. During the last hearing the Supreme Court hinted that it won't accept the discharge of BJP leaders on technical grounds.

The main case against the activists - who called themselves Karsevaks - is pending in the Lucknow trial court.
The CBI has challenged the Allahabad High Court order in May 2010 confirming the lower court's decision to drop conspiracy charges against the BJP veterans.
"We will not accept the discharge of Advani and others on technical grounds. We will allow you (CBI) to file a supplementary charge-sheet against 13 persons by including the conspiracy charges. We will ask the trial court to conduct a joint trial," the Supreme Court told CBI earlier this month.
Strongly opposing this, Mr Advani's lawyer had told the Supreme Court that if conspiracy charges are added, then 183 witnesses who had testified in a lower court would have to be called again.
Of the two cases in the Babri demolition, one is against Mr Advani and the other BJP leaders who were on the dais at a raised platform called "Ram Katha Kunj" around 200 metres from the mosque site, where many provocative speeches were allegedly made.
The other case is against lakhs of unknown karsevaks who were in and around the disputed structure and are accused of pulling down the three domes in an act that changed the face of Indian politics and caused a deep rift between two communities.
Mr Advani and Mr Joshi, who emerged as the BJP's most prominent faces along with former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee at the height of the temple-mosque dispute, have retreated into the wings after being assigned a mentorship role in 2014.
Meanwhile The Supreme Court has suggested an out of court settlement as the best way to resolve the contentious issue of temple or mosque. The Chief Justice of India even said he is ready to mediate. A move welcomed by the BJP and other political parties.



Comments
Add new comment