With a view to cleaning up the administration of Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple, the Supreme Court on Thursday April 24,2014 entrusted its administration to a five-member committee headed by the Thiruvananthapuram District Judge.
A Bench of
Justices R.M. Lodha and A.K. Patnaik asked the temple’s Executive
Officer to go on leave, and appointed Satish Kumar, a senior IAS officer
and former administrator of the Guruvayur temple.
It
also directed the former Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) Vinod
Rai to undertake the audit of the temple properties, assets, and
accounts. The Bench said: “The five-member committee will comprise the
Thiruvananthapuram District Judge, temple Tantri Satish Namboodiri,
Chief Nambi, and two more members, of which one will be appointed in
consultation with the State government.”
In its
order, the Bench said: “Until further orders, no property of the temple
will be alienated, sold or dealt with in any manner. In case the
District Judge was a non-Hindu, the next senior-most Hindu judge in the
district will be the administrative committee’s chairman.” The Bench
expressed its dissatisfaction over the manner in which the temple was
being maintained and said: “The trustees have failed badly and they have
to be changed. If we have to give opportunity to the same persons and
returned to them, then God save this temple. We have to look at larger
public interest and the interest of the temple.”
The
Bench said the administrative committee, once it took charge of the
affairs, would free the trustees from any liability on the decision
taken by the panel.
The SC while agreeing with the report of the
amicus curiae Gopal Subramaniam, had on Thursday ordered the creation of
a five-member administrative set-up under the district judge which will
not have any direct representation of the royal family.
The
decision also signalled a critical turn in the long-drawn litigation
for transparency in administration and proper audit of the huge
treasures of the temple, started years back as a private petition in a
local court.
Lord Padmanabha is the family deity of
Travancore royal house, and since 18th century the princes of the
lineage had ruled most of south Kerala and adjoining parts of Tamil Nadu
as “Padmanabhadasa” (servants of Padmanabha).
After
the integration of the princely state in 1947, the royal rule came to an
end and most major temples of Travancore were brought under a Devaswom
Board.
But as a special case, control over the Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple was left in the hands of the royal family
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