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Amethi: Modi to visit Rahul Gandhi's constituency tomorrow

Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the 'Construction Technology India 2019' event in New Delhi | PTI

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address a public meeting and lay the foundation stone of an ordnance factory unit in Amethi, the parliamentary constituency of Congress president Rahul Gandhi, in Uttar Pradesh on Sunday.

Amethi is being given a saffron hue ahead of the visit, during which Modi will launch several projects. Amethi has remained loyal to the Nehru-Gandhi family for long.

This would be Modi's first visit to Amethi after coming to power in 2014. Modi visited the neighbouring Rae Bareli constituency, represented in the Lok Sabha by UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi, in December.

According to official sources, Modi will address a public meeting in Kauhar area of Gauriganj and will launch some projects, besides laying the foundation stone of a new unit of the Munshiganj Ordnance Factory, where assault rifles will be made in collaboration with Russia, on Sunday.

Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath visited Amethi earlier this week to review preparations for the prime minister's visit.

Modi previously visited Amethi on May 5, 2014, and the BJP, which had fielded party leader Smriti Irani against Rahul in the 2014 general election, had managed 3 lakh votes.

Irani has been nurturing Amethi since and is expected to contest again in the coming election, expected to be held in April-May.

State BJP general secretary Govind Narain Shukla, who is the convenor of the prime minister's public meeting, said, "It will be a historic meeting in Kauhar, with over 1.25 lakh people likely to attend."

In 2017 Uttar Pradesh assembly elections, the BJP had won four of the five assembly constituencies under Amethi Lok Sabha seat, with the SP winning one. Congress had failed to open its account in the Nehru-Gandhi bastion.

Meanwhile, Congress workers have objected to the whitewashing of the wall paintings of their leader, Rahul Gandhi, near the meeting venue.

Rahul's representative, Chandrakant Dubey, said whitewashing the paintings of the local MP was "very sad and unfortunate" and only showed the intolerance of BJP leaders and workers.