According to the government, the probe aims to verify facts, counter misinformation and address claims that attempts were being made to tarnish the image of the Ram temple.
The SIT comprises Lucknow divisional commissioner Vijay Vishwas Pant, inspector general of police Kiran S. and finance department special secretary Neel Ratan.
The issue gained political traction after Akhilesh Yadav earlier alleged that reports suggested crores of rupees donated by devotees to the Ram temple had gone missing. Calling the matter โextremely sensitiveโ for millions of devotees, he urged the courts to take suo motu cognisance and questioned the silence of both the temple trust and the government.
The allegations triggered a sharp response from the trust. Its general secretary, Champat Rai, rejected claims of financial irregularities and stated that internal audits were already underway. He said representatives of both the trust and the State Bank of India were regularly involved in the audit process and that no evidence supporting allegations of missing funds had emerged so far.
The controversy widened further when former BJP MP Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh claimed he was aware of alleged misuse of donation money but declined to disclose details publicly. Separately, senior BJP leader Rajneesh Singh wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi demanding greater transparency and seeking disclosure of the trust’s finances, donations, expenditures, assets, bank accounts and land transactions.
Amid the growing political storm, the trust has maintained that the SIT inquiry will help establish the facts, dispel rumours and restore public confidence in the management of one of the country’s most significant religious institutions.
With opposition parties raising questions and the government ordering a formal probe, the investigation is expected to draw significant public attention in the coming weeks, given the immense religious and political significance attached to the Ram temple project.
With PTI inputs