Just Earth News | @justearthnews | 19 Aug 2020, 11:40 am Print
Lyari: A pre-partition Hindu temple has been allegedly demolished by a builder in Pakistan's Lyari area, media reports said on Wednesday.
The police have sealed the construction site where the temple was reportedly present.
Dozens of Hindu families had gathered at the site on the narrow streets of Fida Hussain Sheikh Road in Lyari after they heard that the Hanuman Mandir there had been razed the previous evening, The Express Tribune reported.
Lyari assistant commissioner Abdul Karim Memon arrived with the police and, inspecting the temple that had been reduced to a pile of bricks, sealed all three doors of the construction site, where a residential building is to be erected, the newspaper reported.
Police have started an inquiry into the matter.
"We have initiated an inquiry," he told The Express Tribune after sealing the location, adding that he had sealed it so that the probe could be carried out.
"It is an injustice as a place of worship has been destroyed," decried an elderly onlooker, Mohammad Irshad Baloch. "It was an old temple. We have been seeing it since we were children."
A resident of the area, Heera Lal, informed The Express Tribune that there had been 18 families living near the temple. "We were assured by the builder that the temple would not be destroyed," he insisted, adding that the demolition had taken place late on Sunday evening.
"No one was allowed to visit the temple during the lockdown," explained Haresh, another resident who often visited the temple before. "He [the builder] exploited the situation [of the pandemic] and demolished our place of worship while we could not visit it," he cried, demanding that the temple be restored.
The local Hindu people have expressed their dissatisfaction over the incident.
Speaking to The Express Tribune, Mohan Lal, a Hindu activist, accused the builder of threatening members of the minority community who had assembled at the site and highlighted the temple's demolition.
"We tried to enter the temple but were denied entry by the builder," he narrated, adding that the man had deceived the residents living there. "We will not allow anyone to demolish our places of worship in this manner," he added.
Meanwhile, South deputy commissioner Irshad Ahmed Sodhar told The Express Tribune that there had previously been two temples there, according to the Hindu families living at the site, but one of them had already been moved earlier.
Image: Unsplash
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