Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led goverment is all set to table the Waqf (Amendment) Bill, 2024, in the Lok Sabha on August 8. The new bill that proposes to amend the Waqf Act, 1995 will be introduced in the Lok Sabha by Minority Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju. With over 40 amendments, the bill has proposed to revoke several clauses in the existing Waqf Act – the law governing Waqf boards. It has proposed far-reaching changes in the present Act, including ensuring the representation of Muslim women and non-Muslims in such bodies.
The Bill proposes the inclusion of two Muslim women and two non-Muslim members in the Waqf Board, and inserts a new section to prevent the wrongful declaration of a property as ‘Waqf’. The Waqf comprises property or land donated by followers of Islam, and is presently managed by the members of the community. Waqf Boards currently control 8.7 lakh properties spanning 9.4 lakh acres across India, with an estimated value of ₹1.2 lakh crore. Collectively, this makes the Waqf Boards the third largest landowner in India, after the armed forces and the Indian Railways. The Waqf Act was last amended in 2013.
In case of dispute with the decision of the waqf board, appeals can now be made in the respective high courts.
Currently, a property can be considered as a waqf, even if its original declaration is suspect or disputed. The provision was provided as under Islamic law, the dedication of a property as waqf was largely oral, until documentation (waqfnama) became the standard norm.
The bill seeks to omit such provisions, thus a waqf property can be considered suspect or disputed in the absence of a valid waqfnama. The property can no longer be used till the final decision is made by the District Collector.
Amendments also give the Central government the power to “direct the audit of any waqf at any time by an auditor appointed by the Comptroller and Auditor-General of India, or by any officer designated by the Central Government for that purpose”.
It refers to a moveable or immovable property dedicated in the name of God for charitable purposes by a deed or an instrument. The practice has been in existence even before the practice of documentation began. Hence, properties, which have been in use for a long time can also be considered, as Waqf properties. A Waqf property can either be for public charitable purposes or held private to benefit an individual’s descendants. A Waqf property is non-transferable and held perpetually in the name of God. The proceeds from a Waqf typically fund educational institutions, graveyards, mosques, and shelter homes benefitting a large number of Muslims.
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