PRAYAGRAJ, India (Reuters) - A powerful Hindu priest said on Wednesday he would lead a group of followers to start building a Hindu temple on the ruins of a 16th-century mosque, which could violate a court order and raise religious tensions in an election year.

FILE PHOTO: A worker engraves a stone that Hindu groups say will be used to build a Ram temple at a disputed religious site in Ayodhya in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, India, November 6, 2018. REUTERS/Pawan Kumar//File Photo

A Hindu mob leveled the mosque in 1992, sparking communal riots that killed about 2,000 people across India. The site, in the northern town of Ayodhya, has been the focus of dispute between majority Hindus and minority Muslims for many years.

Hindu groups believe the site to be the birthplace of Lord Ram, one of the religion’s most revered deities. They also point to evidence there was a temple there before the mosque was built in 1528.

The place where the Babri Mosque once stood is now under court control, guarded by armed state and federal police and surrounded by walls and watchtowers.

“We’ll lay the foundation stone there on Feb. 21,” Swami Swaroopanand Saraswati said after meeting Hindu monks and priests at the world’s biggest religious gathering, Kumbh Mela, in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh where Ayodhya is located.

“Lord Ram resides there and that’s his birthplace.”

But Zafaryab Jilani, a secretary of the All-India Muslim Personal Law Board and an advocate in the mosque case, said his community would not be provoked by such calls to disturb the status quo and that any attempt to breach the site would amount to a contempt of court.

“We have full faith in the Supreme Court,” he told Reuters.

Saraswati’s aides said they were ready to be arrested if their attempts are resisted.

His statement to Reuters partner ANI and others comes a day after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist government petitioned the Supreme Court to return land around the site seized by various court orders over the years.

Building the temple is a key demand of the conservative Hindu allies of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and has gained fresh impetus ahead of a general election due by May.

The BJP said in its 2014 general election manifesto it would “explore all possibilities within the framework of the constitution” to facilitate the construction of a Ram temple at the disputed site.

The BJP government in Uttar Pradesh state, whose chief minister Yogi Adityanath is a robe-wearing Hindu priest, has already organized a large eight-week Kumbh Mela gathering at Prayagraj city. Up to 150 million people, including a million foreign visitors, are expected to bathe at the confluence of the Ganges, the Yamuna, and a mythical third river, the Saraswati.