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Name of the Act
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Waqf Act, 1995
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Unified Waqf Management, Empowerment, Efficiency, and Development Act, 2025.
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Formation of Waqf
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Waqf could be formed by declaration, user, or endowment (waqf-alal-aulad).
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- Removes waqf by user and allows formation only through declaration or endowment.
- Donors must be practicing Muslims for at least five years and must own the property.
- Waqf-alal-aulad cannot deny inheritance rights to female heirs.
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Government Property as Waqf
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No clear provision.
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Any government property identified as Waqf will cease to be Waqf. Ownership disputes will be resolved by the Collector, who will submit a report to the state government.
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Power to Determine Waqf Property
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The Waqf Board previously had the power to inquire and determine waqf property.
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Provision removed.
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Survey of Waqf
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Assigned survey commissioners and additional commissioners to conduct Waqf surveys.
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Empowers Collectors to conduct surveys and mandates pending surveys to be conducted as per state revenue laws.
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Central Waqf Council Composition
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- Constituted the Central Waqf Council to advise the central and state governments and Waqf Boards.
- All members of the Central Waqf Council had to be Muslims, including at least two women members.
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- Two members must be non-Muslims.
- MPs, former judges, and eminent persons appointed to the Council as per the Act need not be Muslims.
- The following members must be Muslims: Representatives of Muslim organisations, Scholars in Islamic law, Chairpersons of Waqf Boards
- Of the Muslim members, two members must be women.
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Waqf Boards Composition
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- Provides for election of up to two members each from electoral colleges of Muslim: (i) MPs, (ii) MLAs and MLCs, and (iii) Bar Council members, from the state to the Board.
- At least two members must be women
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The Bill empowers the state government to nominate one person from each background to the Board. They need not be Muslims. It adds that the Board must have:
- Two non-Muslim members
- At least one member each from Shias, Sunnis, and Backward classes of Muslims
- One member each from Bohra and Agakhani communities (if there is Waqf in the state)
- Two Muslim members must be women.
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Tribunal Composition
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Required state-level Tribunals for Waqf disputes, led by a judge (Class-1, District, Sessions, or Civil Judge), and included:
- A state officer (Additional District Magistrate rank)
- A Muslim law expert
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The amendment removes the Muslim law expert and instead includes:
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- A current or former District Court judge as chairman
- A current or former joint secretary to the state government
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Appeal on Tribunal Orders
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Decision of the Tribunal are final and appeals against its decisions in Courts are prohibited.
Only High Courts could intervene under special circumstances
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The Bill omits provisions deeming finality to Tribunal’s decisions.
Allows appeals to the High Court within 90 days
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Powers of Central Government
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State governments could audit Waqf accounts at any time.
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- The Bill empowers the central government to make rules regarding registration, publication of accounts of waqf and publication of proceedings of Waqf Boards.
- The Bill empowers the central government to get these audited by the CAG (Comptroller and Auditor General) or a designated officer.
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Separate Waqf Boards for Sects
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Separate Waqf Boards for Sunni and Shia sects if Shia waqf constitute more than 15% of all waqf properties or waqf income in the state.
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Separate Waqf boards allowed for Bohra and Agakhani sects, along with Shia and Sunni sects.
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