Ram Temple at Ayodhya is a part of the BJP Agenda, says Amit Shah

Ram Temple at Ayodhya is a part of the BJP Agenda, says Amit Shah
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  • The way for construction of Ram Temple will be either through mutual agreement, talks or through a court decision
  • Shah said aside from the reserves allocated to Uttar Pradesh, the Union government had offered its coffers for the state to prosper
  • Shah mocked the media speculation that Shivpal Singh was hitching himself to the party bandwagon.

New Delhi, August 1, 2017: On Monday, Amit Shah, BJP's National President said a fabulous Ram temple is going to be built in Ayodhya, the route for which can be through mutual agreement, talks, or a decision of the court.

On his visit's last day to the capital of Uttar Pradesh, Shah addressed the media and said that establishment of this Ayodhya temple was the agenda's part of Bharatiya Janata Party.

He complimented the government of Yogi Adityanath at the state level and its performance and told everyone that within three months, the governance had made people observe a noticeable transition.

"It is a coincidence that as I speak to you, three years of the Narendra Modi government at the Centre and three months of the Yogi Aditynath government in the state have been completed," the chief of BJP said, complimenting the performance of both of them.

Shah mocked the speculation of media that Shivpal Singh, Mulayam Singh Yadav's younger brother, and senior leader of Samajwadi Party (SP), was trying to hitch himself to the bandwagon of the party.

Accompanied by state BJP chief and Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya, and Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, Shah also made a claim that Modi had appeared as the most renowned Indian Prime Minister ever all thanks to his eradication of black money, courageous decisions, and good governance.

Amit Shah, BJP National President. Wikimedia

Shah also endeavored to end the supposition about Maurya of being moved as a Union minister to the Centre, saying that when the chief of a state party was chosen, Maurya would allocate all his time to the government at state.

He also made an attempt to rubbish the charges put by the opposition by saying that having dinner at a Yadav worker's house, he was singling out politics on caste.

"Sonu Yadav is a party booth worker, and just as I go to eat at any other place, I went to his house and had food… No politics should be read in this," he further added.

Shah put the blame on the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) as well as the former Samajwadi Party governments at the state level of the turmoil in Uttar Pradesh, saying that they had together presided over frauds of Rs 12 lakh crore. "There is not one finger raised at us as the government is working with transparency," he said.

The chief of BJP said there did not exist any of party's names in those Panama leaks, and the Special Investigation Team was examining the leaks of Panama Papers in any circumstance.

Shah said aside from the reserves allotted to Uttar Pradesh, the Union government had offered its coffers so that the state can grow and develop.

-prepared by Harsimran Kaur of NewsGram. Twitter @Hkaur1025

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