The Lal Masjid, which was freed from occupation by radical elements in a military operation in July, was on Wednesday reopened to the public on the orders of the Supreme Court with President Pervez Musharraf asserting that militants would not be allowed to take over the shrine again.
The mosque in the heart of Islamabad was reopened after remaining closed for three months in the wake of the military operation that left more than 100 people dead.
Army commandos stormed the mosque and the Jamia Hafsa, its affiliated girls' seminary, on July 3 after the militants refused to surrender. The mosque had been closed since July 3.
It was opened for Friday prayers on July 27 but was re-occupied by radical students, who forced the government-appointed imam to leave the mosque. The government then closed the mosque again but the Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered the government to re-open it today for morning prayers.
A Supreme Court bench of Justice Nawaz Abbasi and Justice M Javed Buttar also ordered the reconstruction of the Jamia Hafsa, which was demolished by the government after the military operation, at the same site. Around 4,000 female students had been studying in the madrassa.
Admitting that the reopening of the Lal Masjid was a 'sensitive' issue, Musharraf said authorities were always in favour of allowing people to offer prayers at the shrine.
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Lal Masjid + judicial crisis = emergency?
Coverage: The Lal Masjid Standoff