He alleged that both Sunni and Shia Waqf boards are being charged with corruption, and the government will dissolve them soon.
Though things are still to be finalised, the minister said the UP Muslif Waqf board when constituted will have members of both Sunni and Shia communities and its chairman will be selected from among them.
"The government has got a number of letter and suggestions from various quarters regarding the merger of Sunni and Shia Waqf boards. After which, the government has sought a proposal in this regard from the department concerned.
He also claimed that all states of the country except UP and Bihar have only one Waqf board.
More From This Section
According to Raza, having separate Waqf boards in the state is not "legal".
Quoting the Waqf Act 1995, he said Shia or Sunni should have at least 15 per cent share in total Waqf units for constitution of separate boards, which he said is not the case in UP where the Shias account for only 5,000 units of the total 24,000 Waqf units.
The minister further said that as per the Central Waqf council, there are only 3,000 units of Shia Waqf Board, and that there was no point in keeping a separate Shia Board.
"Separate chairman, CEO and other staff incure heavy expenses. It is a wastage of money," Mohsin Raza said.
Reacting to the development, Shia Waqf board Chairman Waseem Rizvi said there is no provision to separate Sunni and Shia boards which were constituted in 2015 for the the tenure of five years.
Rizvi also alleged that the share of income of Shia Waqf board is over 15 per cent of the total income.