Over the years, many properties that were donated through oral declarations or community customs have been legitimised as waqf properties because of their continuous use by the Muslim community.
But under the new law, waqf boards were required to provide valid documents to claim a property as waqf. In case of disputes, the final decision rested with the government.
The court struck down the rule, saying that allowing the government to determine the rights of a citizen would go against the separation of powers between the executive and judiciary, mandated under the constitution.
Another contentious provision that was scrapped was a clause that required a waqf donor to be a practising Muslim for at least five years.
Gross, religion touched law again. Cut it out, get back into the hazardous material containment zone.
You seem to have exactly zero idea what you’re talking about.
Good job being super correct, nothing about this deals with special treatment (past or present) granted to or restrictions placed upon anyone based on which gods they’re wrong about. Well done, that’s egg on my face.