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The ‘0.195 acre’ near Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan: What is at the heart of the dispute over the Faiz-e-Ilahi mosque?

Local people threw stones and police responded with teargas after MCD demolished structures near the mosque at Turkman Gate. What is the history of this case?

The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) carried out a demolition drive at the encroached area in the vicinity of Faiz-e-Elahi Masjid, Turkman Gate, near Ramlila MaidanThe Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) carried out a demolition drive at the encroached area in the vicinity of Faiz-e-Elahi Masjid, Turkman Gate, near Ramlila Maidan (Express photo by Gajendra Yadav)

Early on Wednesday (January 7), the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) demolished encroachments around the Masjid & Dargah Syed Faiz-e-Ilahi near Turkman Gate.

The MCD action triggered violence; people of the area allegedly threw stones, and police responded with mild tear gas. An FIR has been registered and five people have been arrested.

The demolition came within hours of the Delhi High Court declining a plea for an interim stay on the proposed action by the MCD.

What is the background of the demolition, and what violations have the civic authorities targeted?

Where and when did this sequence of events begin?

In May 2025, an organisation called Save India Foundation complained to government authorities that a large “Mosque/ Markaz structure”, a banquet hall, a charitable dialysis and diagnostic centre, and multiple commercial pathology laboratories were operating illegally on government land at the site near Ramlila Maidan.

The Save India Foundation is registered as a trust, and its founder is one Preet Singh. The organisation claims to be working on “raising issues for the enforcement of rights” of citizens.

Taking cognizance of the NGO’s complaint, officials of the Land and Development Office (L&DO) under the Union Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, Delhi Development Authority (DDA), and MCD carried out a joint survey at the site on October 16 last year.

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The survey confirmed roughly 2,512 square feet of encroachment on the road and footpath maintained by the Public Works Department (PWD) of the government of Delhi, and another 36,248 sq ft of encroachment on the Ramlila ground adjoining the premises of the mosque.

Armed with this joint survey report (JSR), the Save India Foundation moved the High Court seeking directions to the authorities to remove these illegal encroachments.

On November 12, the HC directed that in respect of the land under the MCD (i.e., the Ramlila Maidan), “appropriate action for removal of such encroachment as also removal of illegal commercial activity as mentioned in JSR shall be taken by the MCD and the same shall be concluded expeditiously”.

What have the authorities in charge of the mosque said about the land?

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The managing committee of the Masjid & Dargah Syed Faiz-e-Ilahi has claimed that the Masjid, Dargah, and a Muslim graveyard at the site were established as Waqf more than a century ago, and that the properties had been used by the local community of Muslims ever since.

According to the committee, the graveyard had stopped being in use over time, but the mosque and dargah – which is the tomb or shrine of a Muslim saint – continued to be functional.

The open ground, which, according to the committee, is the part of “Waqf land”, has been used for community activities such as carrying out free medical check-ups, distribution of ration and, occasionally, weddings.

And what events led to the government move to urgently remove the encroachments?

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In its direction issued to the Masjid committee to remove the encroachments in November 2025, the PWD mentioned the “critical importance” of Asaf Ali Road, on which the mosque is located.

Asaf Ali Road, which runs from Delhi Gate to Kamla Market in central Delhi, is a “high priority carriageway and forms a crucial link between central Delhi zones”, the PWD notice said. The busy road is “routinely” used for “VVIP and VIP movement, including emergency convoys and designated security routes”, and “any obstruction on this road has the potential to impede national-level security movement, delay emergency response operations, and disrupt core city mobility”, the notice said.

Following the JSR and after hearing the Masjid committee, the MCD, in an order issued on December 22, said that “by no stretch of imagination, masjid or dargah or graveyard can be used as marriage venue or clinic”, and that was a “blatant misuse of public land”.

Therefore, the MCD said, “any structure beyond 0.195 acre of land is an encroachment and deserves to be removed.”

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This “0.195 acre” of land – which was referred to in the lease deed of February 1940 – lies at the heart of the dispute.

While the government has assured that it would not touch this 0.195-acre area, it has said that both the mosque and the graveyard are included in this patch of land. The Masjid committee, however, contends that the graveyard lies outside this 0.195 acre.

And what is the view of the Delhi Waqf Board?

The managing committee of the Masjid Dargah Faiz-e-Ilahi has been constituted by the Delhi Waqf Board. On October 29, 2025, the Waqf Board noted that “there have been various complaints of misuse of (this) Waqf property…right since the year 2000 onwards.”

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According to the Board, there were two notified Waqf properties near Ramlila Maidan in 1970 – one, the “Khawaja Faiz Elahi Mosque alias Mosque Ghosian and Graveyard”, and the other, “Masjid and graveyard Fazal Mahmood Ram Lila Ground, Turkman Gate”.

According to the gazette notification, both these properties were more than 100 years old. In respect of the latter property, however, it was recorded in 1970 that “the mosque has since been demolished and a temple with compound wall is constructed over the premises.”

With regard to the former property, the gazette notification does not mention the specific areas under the mosque and graveyard, the Board has conceded. The absence of a record of specific measurements has created a grey area with regard to the limits of the property notified as Waqf.

Sohini Ghosh is a Senior Correspondent at The Indian Express. Previously based in Ahmedabad covering Gujarat, she recently moved to the New Delhi bureau, where she primarily covers legal developments at the Delhi High Court Professional Profile Background: An alumna of the Asian College of Journalism (ACJ), she previously worked with ET NOW before joining The Indian Express. Core Beats: Her reporting is currently centered on the Delhi High Court, with a focus on high-profile constitutional disputes, disputes over intellectual property, criminal and civil cases, issues of human rights and regulatory law (especially in the areas of technology and healthcare). Earlier Specialty: In Gujarat, she was known for her rigorous coverage in the beats of crime, law and policy, and social justice issues, including the 2002 riot cases, 2008 serial bomb blast case, 2016 flogging of Dalits in Una, among others. She has extensively covered health in the state, including being part of the team that revealed the segregation of wards at the state’s largest government hospital on lines of faith in April 2020. With Ahmedabad being a UNESCO heritage city, she has widely covered urban development and heritage issues, including the redevelopment of the Sabarmati Ashram Recent Notable Articles (Late 2025) Her recent reporting from the Delhi High Court covers major political, constitutional, corporate, and public-interest legal battles: High-Profile Case Coverage She has extensively covered the various legal battles - including for compensation under the aegis of North East Delhi Riots Claims Commission - pertaining to the 2020 northeast Delhi riots, as well as 1984 anti-Sikh riots. She has also led coverage at the intersection of technology and governance, and its impact on the citizenry, from, and beyond courtrooms — such as the government’s stakeholder consultations for framing AI-Deepfake policy. Signature Style Sohini is recognized for her sustained reporting from courtrooms and beyond. She specialises in breaking down dense legal arguments to make legalese accessible for readers. Her transition from Gujarat to Delhi has seen her expand her coverage on regulatory, corporate and intellectual property law, while maintaining a strong commitment to human rights and lacuna in the criminal justice system. X (Twitter): @thanda_ghosh ... Read More

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