AYODHYA, India: Indians watch a model of the Ram temple during the 'Dharam Sabha' Hindu congregation held to call for the construction of the grand temple yesterday. - AFP

AYODHYA, India: Tens of thousands of Hindu hardliners rallied yesterday for a temple to be built at a disputed Indian holy site, where an ancient mosque was razed in 1992 sparking deadly riots. Huge crowds of saffron-clad protesters, some waving swords and chanting "Praise Be to Ram", massed in Ayodhya in northern Uttar Pradesh state where right-wing Hindu groups want a grand temple to their god constructed. Organizers had expected 300,000 demonstrators to attend rallies in Ayodhya and two other Indian cities, with protesters arriving by bus and train throughout the day.

Security measures were beefed up, with some 5,000 additional police deployed to protest areas, especially in Ayodhya. Many Hindus believe a spot there marks the birthplace of Ram and that a medieval mosque that stood there for 460 years was only built after the destruction of an earlier temple. Hindu zealots reduced the Babri Mosque to rubble in 1992, kicking off riots across India that left thousands dead, most of them Muslims.

The site remains a flashpoint between Hindus and India's sizeable Muslim minority and the show of force by hardliners comes two weeks before the 26th anniversary of the mosque's destruction. Huge banners bearing images of the mosque being torn down by sledgehammer-wielding radicals hung at the protest, where hardline leaders called for parliament to pass a law allowing for the temple's construction. Uttar Pradesh's chief minister Yogi Adityanath, a firebrand monk who has long campaigned for the temple, unveiled plans yesterday to build the world's largest statue in Ayodhya - a 221-metre bronze likeness of Ram.

Flashpoint

The temple controversy has been tied up in courts for decades but some hardline groups are applying pressure to Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the issue ahead of general elections in the next six months. Modi, who is running for a second term, has faced some disquiet from his core supporters who feel that he has not done enough for the cause, despite his parliamentary majority. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) he rules is a Hindu nationalist outfit with ties to some of the hardline groups rallying in Ayodhya, including the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Shiv Sena.

"The emotions of Hindus should not be taken for granted," said Uddhav Thackeray, the head of Shiv Sena, as quoted by the Press Trust of India. VHP leader leader Champat Rai told demonstrators they would only accept "the entire area" for the Ram temple and would not consider sharing the site with Muslims. Riaz Ahmed, a 50-year-old businessman from Ayodhya, said it was understandable that religious leaders would lobby for a temple in the holy city. "But what's worrying is that all this is being given a political colour," he told AFP.

More than 2,000 died in widespread riots after the mosque was torn down in 1992. Ten years later, the murder of Hindu pilgrims returning by train from Ayodhya triggered revenge attacks on Muslims in Gujarat that left more than 700 dead by government estimates. The BJP was on the margins until the 1980s when it backed the movement for construction of the Ram temple in Ayodhya. The promise for a temple has prominently figured in several BJP campaigns, especially in the bellwether Uttar Pradesh state, which it rules with an absolute majority.

Both Hindu and Muslim groups have petitioned India's Supreme Court to resolve the issue. But the top court has sought more time and the heavily fortified site, which looks like a small garrison town, is under its control. Speakers criticized the Supreme Court for not delivering a quick verdict in the favor of the temple, while protesters chanted: "To hell with the Supreme Court".

The delay has disappointed India's majority Hindu community, which cannot wait endlessly for a verdict, said Sharad Sharma, spokesman for the VHP, or the World Hindu Council, which has close ties with the BJP. Both the BJP and VHP and their parent movement, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), have asked the government to issue an executive order to build a temple and by-pass the Supreme Court. Anti-Muslim chants rang out on roads leading to the gathering, while the streets of the towns of Ayodhya and Faizabad were deserted as local residents feared violence.

"Many people thought that the issue of the temple had died down but we must warn them that now we'll not sit idle until we see a temple of Lord Ram," Krishna Gopal of RSS said. Yesterday's gathering would be followed up with bigger protests in India's capital New Delhi, Sharma of the VHP said. - Agencies