A 150-year-old Hindu temple in Karachi is facing threat due to construction of underpasses and flyovers in the area and the country's rights body has sought intervention of the Chief Justice to protect it.
The chairperson Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has expressed deep concern over the adverse impact that the construction could have on the Sri Ratneswar Mahadev temple located in Clifton area.
"Ground vibrations from excavation and from the eventual high-density traffic running so close to the temple could cause collapse of this irreplaceable place of worship," the HRCP chairperson said and sought the intervention of the Chief Justice of Pakistan to protect the temple.
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In a letter sent to the Chief Justice, the HRCP chairperson noted that business interests in complicity with officials of the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (KMC) had started construction of multiple flyovers and underpasses around the Clifton seafront without any prior notice.
She noted that such a major venture "which would vandalise the very face of a historical part of the city, has not undergone the Environmental Impact Assessment (with public hearings) mandated by law".
The HRCP chairperson that every year thousands of Hindu and Sikh devotees visited the temple.
She said that the Hindu community in Sindh had been experiencing escalating human rights violations over the past few years.
"The Laxmi Narayan Mandir, located at Native Jetty, near the Jinnah Bridge on M A Jinnah Road, had its access, privacy and environs severely affected a few years ago by another commercial project, Port Grand."
The letter called upon the Chief Justice to summon the KMC officials to explain the matter and ensure that all necessary steps were taken to protect the temple.