SC Upheld Waqf (Amendment) Act, 2025

Syllabus: GS2/Polity and Governance

Context

  • The Supreme Court has upheld the Waqf (Amendment) Act, 2025 while striking down few provisions and balancing state regulation with minority rights.
Meaning of ‘Waqf’:
– Refers to properties dedicated solely for religious or charitable purposes under Islamic law.
Sale or other use of the property is prohibited.
– The ownership of the property is transferred from the person making the Waqf (called waqif) to Allah, making it irrevocable.
– The creator is a wakif, and the property is managed by a mutawalli.
Origin of the Concept of ‘Waqf’:
Traces back to the Delhi Sultanate when Sultan Muizuddin Sam Ghaor dedicated villages to the Jama Masjid of Multan.
– Waqf properties grew with the rise of Islamic dynasties in India.
The Mussalman Waqf Validating Act of 1913 protected the institution of Waqf in India.
Constitutional Framework and Governance: 
Charitable and religious institutions are under the Concurrent List of the Constitution, allowing both Parliament and State Legislatures to frame laws on it.
Creation of Waqf: Can be created via:
1. Declaration (oral or written deed).
2. Long-term use of land for religious or charitable purposes.
3. Endowment upon the end of a line of succession.
States with the highest share of Waqf properties: Uttar Pradesh (27%), West Bengal (9%), Punjab (9%).
Evolution of Waqf Laws:
1. 1913 Act: Validated Waqf deeds.
2. 1923 Act: Made registration of Waqf properties mandatory.
3. 1954: Established Central Waqf Council and State Waqf Boards for better management.
4. 1995 Act: Introduced Tribunals for dispute resolution and added elected members and Islamic scholars to Waqf Boards.

Key Amendments of the Waqf (Amendment) Act, 2025

  • Composition of the Central Waqf Council: The Union Minister in-charge of waqf is the ex-officio chairperson.
  • Council members include: 
    • Members of Parliament (MPs).
    • Persons of national eminence.
    • Retired Supreme Court/High Court judges.
    • Eminent scholars in Muslim law.
    • Removes the Muslim requirement for MPs, former judges, and eminent persons.
    • It mandates two non-Muslim members in the Council.
  • Composition of Waqf Boards:
    • Empowers state governments to nominate one person from each group.
    • Non-Muslim members required: two.
    • Must include at least one member each from Shias, Sunnis, and Backward Muslim classes.
    • Requires two Muslim women members.
  • Composition of Tribunals:
    • Removes the expert in Muslim law.
    • District Court judge (Chairman).
    • Joint Secretary rank officer.
  • Appeals Against Tribunal Orders:
    • Act: Decisions of Tribunals are final, with no appeals allowed in courts.
    • Amendment: Allows appeals against Tribunal decisions to the High Court within 90 days.
  • Survey of Properties: The Act replaces the Survey Commissioner with the District Collector or other senior officers to oversee the survey of Waqf properties.
  • Government property as waqf: It states that any government property identified as waqf will cease to be so.
    • The Collector of the area will determine ownership in case of uncertainty, if deemed a government property, he will update the revenue records.
  • Audits: Waqf institutions earning over ₹1 lakh will undergo audits by state-sponsored auditors.
  • Centralized Portal: A centralized portal will be created for automating Waqf property management, enhancing efficiency and transparency.
  • Property Dedication: Practicing Muslims (for at least five years) can dedicate property to the Waqf, restoring pre-2013 rules.
  • Women’s Inheritance: Women must receive inheritance before the Waqf declaration, with special provisions for widows, divorced women, and orphans.

Key changes SC has incorporated into the Act

  • Practicing Islam: The Court’s most significant intervention concerns Section 3(r), which requires anyone creating a waqf to demonstrate they have been practising Islam for at least five years.
    • The court stayed the provision until the government frames rules for determining religious practice.
  • Collector’s Power Over Waqf Properties: Section 3C empowers the district collectors to determine whether properties claimed as waqf actually belong to the government.
    • Court’s ruling: Stayed provision that allowed stripping waqf status before inquiry is complete, calling it “prima facie arbitrary”.
    • Directed that waqf properties cannot be dispossessed or altered until final decision by Waqf Tribunal and any subsequent appeals.
  • Representation in Waqf Administration: Its amended Act allowed up to 12 non-Muslims on the Central Waqf Council (22 members) and 7 non-Muslims on state boards (11 members).
    • The Court’s ruling has capped this at 4 (Central) and 3 (State).
    • CEOs of Waqf Boards should, “as far as possible”, be Muslims (not mandatory).
    • This balance sought transparency & inclusivity vs. minority autonomy in religious affairs.
  • “Waqf by User” Deletion: Earlier law allowed declaring property as waqf based on longstanding religious use without formal documents.
    • Court’s ruling: It upheld deletion, clarified that this change applies only prospectively—existing waqf-by-user properties registered before April 8, 2025, remain protected.
  • Protected Monuments: The court declined to interfere with provisions declaring waqf status void for properties that are protected monuments or belong to Scheduled Tribes. 

Conclusion

  • A law made by Parliament carries a presumption of constitutionality unless a court strikes it down. 
  • While SC refused to stay the Waqf Act, it stayed certain provisions “to protect interest of all parties and balance equities during pendency”.

Source: TH

 

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