Delhi court upholds Shaheen Bagh grave reuse amid burial space crunch
A Delhi court has upheld a trial court order refusing to stop the reuse of a grave at the Shaheen Bagh graveyard, where a woman
A Delhi court has upheld a trial court order refusing to stop the reuse of a grave at the Shaheen Bagh graveyard, where a woman was buried in April 2021. The court said granting such temporary protection would create a private right over scarce public land meant to serve the wider community. District Judge Atul Ahlawat dismissed the appeal filed by M Basharat Hussain against the October 8, 2025 order of the trial court. The judge, however, said the observations were limited to the question of interim relief and would not affect the appellant's right to lead evidence before the trial court while the suit remains pending. Read Full Story Hussain had sought protection of his wife's grave, arguing that under Muslim personal law, a grave could not be reopened or reused until the body had completely decomposed. He also argued that disturbing the grave before seven years would violate the dignity of the deceased and fundamental rights guaranteed under the Constitution.
The Management Committee of Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind and graveyard caretaker Mufti Abdul Raziq opposed the plea. They said the appellant had no legal, statutory, contractual or religiously enforceable right to reserve a specific grave in a public cemetery. They also told the court that the graveyard was facing an acute shortage of burial space and that reuse of graves, carried out with dignity and in line with accepted religious practice, was permissible in cases of necessity. In its July 10 order, the court said, "The trial court had correctly appreciated the facts in the background of the applicable laws and this court does not find any perversity or arbitrariness in the impugned order. Therefore, there is no merit in the present appeal and the same is hereby dismissed. The impugned order is accordingly upheld". Dismissing the appeal, the court said that while Islamic law generally prohibits disturbing graves, authoritative religious texts recognise an exception when burial space is scarce.
It noted that both sides had accepted that the Holy Quran is silent on the issue of reuse of burial space and had relied instead on Hadith. Referring to Islamic jurisprudence, the court said religious texts permit reuse of burial space in cases of necessity, although removal of the bones of the first deceased remains prohibited. The judge said, "The temporary injunction as sought by the appellant to preserve the dignity of the body of his deceased wife could not be granted for any particular period of time, since it would have amounted to creating a private right on the scarce public land, which is utilised for the needs of the society as a whole and the Muslim populace in particular." The court also said the appellant had failed to produce any scientific or cogent evidence to show that his wife's body had not fully decomposed or that seven years was the minimum mandatory period before the grave could be reused.
