Sign in

Dhannipur project in Ayodhya: Trust formed by Sunni Board may look for foreign contributions

The project includes a mosque, a hospital and other structures of public utility on five-acre land allotted to the Sunni Board at Dhannipur village in Ayodhya after the Supreme Court verdict of November 9, 2019 in the Ayodhya title dispute case

Published on: Sep 9, 2021, 23:49:57 IST
By , Lucknow
Share
Share via
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • linkedin
  • whatsapp
Copy link
  • copy link

The Indo-Islamic Cultural Foundation (IICF), the trust formed by the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board (UPSCWB) to look after the Dhannipur project in Ayodhya, on Thursday said that it would look for foreign contributions if a sizable amount did not come from domestic sources.

An artist’s impression of the proposed Dhannipur project in Ayodhya. (FILE PHOTO)
An artist’s impression of the proposed Dhannipur project in Ayodhya. (FILE PHOTO)

The project includes a mosque, a hospital and other structures of public utility on five-acre land allotted to UPSCWB at Dhannipur village in Ayodhya after the Supreme Court verdict of November 9, 2019 in the Ayodhya title dispute case.

“We don’t have any competition, neither are we going for crowd funding as is being done in case of the Ram Mandir construction. On failing to get a sizable amount from India, we would be looking forward to foreign contributions, once we are done with formalities,” said Athar Hussain, spokesperson for IICF.

The Dhannipur project has been named after freedom fighter and revolutionary Maulvi Ahmadullah Shah Faizabadi.

So far, the board has received around 34 lakh in its account that became functional in October 2020. Rohit Srivastava, an employee with the faculty of law at University of Lucknow, was the first to contribute to the project that would cost around 800 crore. Srivastava donated 21,000 for the Dhannipur project.

The board members said 300 crore would be utilised in the construction of hospital, while the remaining amount would be spent on construction of the mosque, Indo-Islamic centre and community kitchen. The first phase of the project, the estimated cost of which is 100 crore, was expected to take off by the next month, the board members said.

“Some approvals from the development authority and some paper work is pending with the development authority. The approval is expected soon,” said Hussain.

  • Oliver Fredrick
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Oliver Fredrick

    Oliver Fredrick is working in capacity of Senior Correspondent and is based in Lucknow. Other than covering important beats like Railways, Defense, Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), District Administration, he loves to write on human interest stories as it gives an instant connect with the readers. In his career of around 10 years, he has done several path-breaking stories which had forced the State Government authorities to take appropriate actions. Prior coming to Lucknow, he was based in Bareilly and was taking care of politically-sensitive West UP districts like Rampur, Moradabad, Pilibhit, Badaun,Muzaffarnagar and others.Read More