The Babri Masjid which was demolished to build the Ram Temple at Ayodhya.

By PTI

LUCKNOW: A woman from Delhi has claimed that the land earmarked for the construction of a mosque in Ayodhya after the Supreme Court order in the Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid case belongs to her family, and she will move the apex court to get its possession.

However, Rani Punjabi’s claims were denied by Zufar Farooqui, who is the head of the Indo-Islamic Cultural Foundation Trust which has been formed for the construction of the mosque, saying her claims were already rejected by the Allahabad High Court in 2021.

Farooqui, who is also the chairperson of the Sunni Central Waqf Board, said work on the entire project, including the construction of the mosque, will start from October this year.

Rani Punjabi, a resident of Delhi, claims that the five acres of land given by the administration to the Sunni Central Waqf Board in Dhannipur village of Ayodhya after the 2019 order of the Supreme Court is a part of 28. 35 acres of land owned by her family.

Rani told PTI they have all the documents of ownership and she will approach the Supreme Court to get it.

According to Rani, her father Gyan Chand Punjabi had to leave the Punajb on Pakistan side after Partition, and he moved to Faizabad (now Ayodhya district) where he was allotted the 28. 35 acre of lans in lieu of the land he had to leave behind.

She said her family used the land for farming until 1983, when her father’s health deteriorated and the family settled in Delhi for his treatment.

This story was originally published in newindianexpress.com. Read the full story here.