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Sharing news about a village in Maharashtra, CNN-News18 Consulting Editor Rahul Shivshankar claimed that the Waqf Board is "empowered to declare any property as Waqf after conducting an inquiry under Sec 40 of the Waqf Act, 1995 (sic)."
In his post, the journalist claimed that the Waqf board was free to declare "any property as Waqf" after an enquiry, and any dispute regarding the inquiry report would be determined by the Waqf Tribunal, and that civil courts do not have jurisdiction in this matter.
This claim surfaces regularly on social media platforms. We found similar claims from 2021, 2022, and 2023, among many more posts.
In this report, we explore the Waqf Act and what it means.
We went through Section 40 of the Waqf Act 1995, as available on the website of the Ministry of Minority Affairs. Section 40 pertains to which properties the Waqf board can claim.
According to this section, if the Waqf has any reason to believe that the property of any registered trust or registered society belongs to the Waqf, they can send a notice to them.
There is no mention of directly claiming any properties, nor does it say anything about private properties.
The question arises – can the Board declare any property as Waqf property?
The Act answers this question, too. In the same section, the Act says that if the Board feels that there is a reason for the property to be Waqf, only then can it make its claim.
Section 3 of the Waqf Act defines what a Waqf property is. It says –
Further points also mention that a property can only be Waqf "when the line of succession fails," which means that the property will not be inherited by future generations.
We found the same definition in Justice SL Jafri's book, 'Wakf Laws in India'.
In 2013, the Central Government had issued a gazette regarding some amendments in the Waqf Act, but no changes have been made in this gazette regarding Section 40.
SMH Zaidi, an expert on Waqf rules, also confirmed to The Quint that the Waqf Board can claim only those properties which:
Have been donated by a person following Islam.
Have been donated for religious or social work, but are not being used for the same.
Conclusion: It is evident that the Waqf board cannot lay claim on any given property in India.
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