A Hindu temple in Pakistan destroyed by a Muslim mob last week will be rebuilt using provincial government funds, its information minister said on Friday.
Around 1,500 people descended on the temple, in a remote village of northeast Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, after protesting against renovations being made to an adjoining building owned by a Hindu group.
Read more: Inter-faith harmony: Pakistan Islamic body allows Hindu temple construction
They used sledgehammers to knock down walls before setting the building ablaze.
“We regret the damage caused by the attack,” said Kamran Bangash, the provincial information minister.
“The chief minister has ordered the reconstruction of the temple and an adjoining house,” he told AFP.
Read more: Ayodhya: A Hindu temple inaugurated at the site of 450-year-old mosque
Construction will start as soon as possible with the support of the Hindu community, he said, adding security would be provided at the site.
Pakistan’s top court has ordered authorities to submit a report on the temple’s destruction.
The temple, which was destroyed in similar circumstances in 1997 and then rebuilt, is located some 160 kilometers (100 miles) southeast of Peshawar, the provincial capital.
Read more: Op-Ed: Demolition of Babri Mosque is an act of Hindu revenge
While no Hindus live in the area, devotees often visit the temple and its shrine to pay homage to the Hindu saint Shri Paramhans, who died there before the 1947 partition of India that gave birth to Pakistan.
District police chief Irfanullah Khan told AFP around 45 people had been detained in connection with the incident, including a local cleric, Maulana Sharif, who is accused of inciting the mob.
Khan added police are also looking for Maulana Mirza Aqeem, the district leader of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI-F), one of Pakistan’s largest Islamist parties.
Read more: Pakistan condemns the construction of Hindu temple at Babri Mosque site