UK rejects new 'mega mosque' plans in London
London: Citing a conflict with authorities' local plans for the borough, the UK government has rejected plans by an Islamic group to build a new 290,000-square-foot mega mosque in east London.
Tablighi Jamaat's mosque with 190-foot
minarets near the Olympic Park would have accommodated up to 9,300
worshippers in two main gender-segregated prayer halls and a further
2,000 in a separate hall.
The Department for Communities and Local
Government (DCLG) has dismissed appeals against the refusal of planning
permission for the mosque in Newham area of the city. A DCLG
spokesperson said: The decision was based on concerns that include local
housing provision and conflict with the council's local plan for the
borough.
The project was rejected by the local
Newham Council back in December, 2012, with councillors saying the
building was too large and would harm their plans for a mixed-use
neighbourhood.
Tablighi Jamaat had appealed, taking the
application to a three-week public inquiry last year. The inquiry
inspector's report was submitted to the DCLG in January this year and
the decision this week concludes a long-drawn battle over the project.
The group had bought the site in 1996,
which was a chemical works until it was decommissioned in the late
1980s. A temporary mosque known as the Riverine Centre, with a capacity
of 2,500 people, was built on the site soon after.
The conservative Tablighi Jamaat has
been accused of links with Islamic radicalism, which is hotly disputed,
with many experts saying it is peaceful and non-political.
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