Protests and a High Court judicial review have brought the proposed transfer of the Bharat Hindu Samaj temple site on Rock Road, Peterborough, into sharp focus. After Peterborough City Council approved the sale of the freehold to the United Kingdom Islamic Mission (UKIM) in February, worshippers initiated legal proceedings to challenge the decision. The case now serves as a significant test of local government due process, the Public Sector Equality Duty, and interfaith trust in the East of England.
In submissions to the High Court, it was asserted that a council’s decision to sell the site of the “principal place of worship for Hindus” in the region to an Islamic organisation was unlawful and should be quashed. This formulation captures both the community’s description of the temple’s role and the gravity of the relief sought.
The Bharat Hindu Samaj has occupied the Rock Road premises since 1986, and the prospect of having to vacate has intensified community concern. According to the pleadings, the temple had been in discussions with the council since 2017 regarding potential transfers or reconfiguration of parts of the site. In September of the following years, the council moved to a best-and-final-offer process after receiving an earlier offer from UKIM.
Within that competitive stage, UKIM was recorded as pledging to “beat any existing cash offer by up to 5%” while stating expressly “that the only religious facilities proposed were for the Muslim community.” The council’s cabinet ultimately resolved to sell the site to UKIM, a decision that triggered both legal scrutiny and peaceful public demonstrations.
For the claimant, barrister Toby Fisher described “significant flaws” in the officers’ reasoning that the cabinet then “blindly” followed, amounting, he argued, to an “unlawful delegation” of the competitive selection to officers. The challenge also contends that the council failed to comply with its equality obligations, given the “dramatic impact” on Hindus of closing a long-established temple with no current alternative premises, contrasted with the scale of UKIM’s existing national network of centres and branches.
The equality argument is framed around the Equality Act 2010 and, by implication, the Public Sector Equality Duty (PSED) in section 149. The claim asserts that the council did not adequately consider the practical and cultural consequences for a minority faith community for whom the temple functions as a place of worship, cultural education, and social support—an assessment that, in equality jurisprudence, typically requires timely, rigorous, and consciously documented consideration.
For the council, barrister Catherine Rowlands responded that there was “nothing before the court that would demonstrate that the cabinet was misled” and that no unlawful delegation occurred. The council’s position is that the authority engaged for years with the temple, ran a transparent, fair, and lawful process, and “paid due regard” to equality considerations appropriate to the sensitivities involved.
Placed in legal context, the court’s analysis will likely focus on process rather than outcomes. Under the Equality Act 2010, the PSED obliges decision-makers to have due regard to the need to eliminate discrimination and advance equality of opportunity. The duty is about the quality of decision-making: evidence of timely consideration, a clear understanding of likely impacts on protected groups, and an audit trail showing that such considerations shaped the decision. A formal equality impact assessment is not always mandatory, but decision-makers must be able to demonstrate due regard in substance and record.
The disposal of local authority land is also governed by principles such as obtaining best consideration under section 123 of the Local Government Act 1972 (subject to recognised exceptions and guidance). While financial considerations matter, public bodies must also manage legal risks inherent in decisions affecting community cohesion and the continuity of established places of worship. Where multiple public interests converge—value for money, equality duties, and community stability—cabinets are expected to demonstrate balanced, rational, and procedurally robust reasoning.
On the question of unlawful delegation, English local government law recognises that officers may evaluate bids and provide recommendations, but elected members must make core judgments where the constitution requires cabinet-level decisions. The court will therefore examine whether the cabinet merely adopted officer scoring in a lawful and informed manner, or whether critical discretion was effectively transferred without proper member engagement.
Beyond statutes and case law, process design is central. Good practice in sensitive disposals typically includes early engagement, clear scoring criteria that capture community and equality impacts, structured member deliberation with documented equality consideration, and meaningful communication with affected communities. These safeguards are not just administrative niceties; they are vital to maintaining public confidence, especially where sacred spaces are concerned.
For many diaspora families, temples like the Bharat Hindu Samaj are more than buildings. They are anchors of language, music, ritual pedagogy, youth mentorship, elder care, and charitable service. For those who have marked life’s milestones there since 1986, the possibility of displacement feels less like a property transaction and more like an interruption of living heritage. Footage widely shared online of peaceful protest underscores how deeply place, memory, and identity are entwined.
Interfaith relations also form a crucial backdrop. Communities of Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs—rooted in dharmic traditions that emphasise pluralism and ahimsa—consistently seek outcomes that uphold dignity for all while preserving the sanctity of their own practices. The presence of UKIM, a longstanding Islamic organisation, similarly highlights the realities of a multi-faith city in which transitions of religious sites require sensitivity, empathy, and transparent governance to avoid the appearance of zero-sum outcomes.
The hearing, presided over by Mr Justice Morris, was scheduled to conclude with a written judgment to follow. Possible outcomes range from upholding the decision, to quashing it and remitting the matter for reconsideration with lawful procedures, to issuing guidance on the approach required under equality and governance duties. Relief in judicial review is discretionary and typically targets defective process rather than the substantive merits of which bidder might ultimately prevail.
Whatever the court’s decision, the long-term imperative remains clear: lawful governance that inspires confidence, equality compliance that is real and evidenced, and interfaith dialogue that recognises the profound social role of sacred spaces. In a multi-faith society, respectful engagement, careful documentation, and fair competition are not competing values but mutually reinforcing duties. In this light, the Peterborough case is less about opposition between communities and more about ensuring that public decisions concerning historic places of worship meet the highest standards of legality, transparency, and community cohesion.
As the judgment is awaited, civic leaders, faith representatives, and community organisers have an opportunity to deepen collaboration—through open forums, mediation where appropriate, and practical planning that seeks continuity of worship and community services. Such steps can transform a point of contention into a model of how dharmic traditions and other faiths together uphold pluralism, protect heritage, and strengthen the social fabric.
Inspired by this post on Hindu Human Rights Blog.












Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.