Key Points

Rajasthan Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma made a one-day trip to Jodhpur for multiple engagements. He attended the IIT Jodhpur convocation and inspected the Antyodaya Sambal Camp. The highlight was his participation in the Loktantra Senani Samman Samaroh, marking 50 years since the Emergency. Minister Jogaram Patel also joined key events during the visit.

Key Points: CM Bhajan Lal Sharma Visits Jodhpur for Emergency Anniversary Event

  • CM Sharma honors democracy fighters on Emergency's 50th anniversary
  • Attends IIT Jodhpur convocation as chief guest
  • Inspects Antyodaya Sambal Camp for welfare schemes
  • Minister Jogaram Patel also joins key events
2 min read

CM Sharma on one day trip to Jodhpur to attend Loktantra Senani Samman Samaroh

Rajasthan CM Bhajan Lal Sharma attends Loktantra Senani Samman Samaroh, IIT Jodhpur convocation, and Antyodaya Sambal Camp in a packed one-day visit.

"The state government is ensuring welfare schemes reach the last rung of society. – CM Bhajan Lal Sharma"

Jaipur, June 26

Rajasthan Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma arrived in Jodhpur on a one-day visit on Thursday to participate in three major events.

His schedule includes attending the 11th convocation of IIT Jodhpur, inspecting the Pandit Deendayal Upadhyay Antyodaya Sambal Fortnight Camp, and participating in the division-level Loktantra Senani Samman Samaroh (Democracy Fighters’ Honour Ceremony) held on the 50th anniversary of the Emergency.

The CM will attend the 11th convocation of IIT Jodhpur at Karwad from 12:30 to 1:30 P.M., after which he will inspect the Antyodaya Sambal Fortnight Camp at village Daije and from 2:30 to 3:30 P.M. he will attend the division-level Loktantra Senani Samman Samaroh at the Marwar International Centre in Polytechnic College Campus. Finally, at 3:40 P.M., he will depart for Jaipur from Jodhpur Airport

The Chief Minister will be the chief guest at the Loktantra Senani Samman Samaroh, organised to honour democracy fighters on the occasion of 'Constitution Murder Day', commemorating 50 years since the Emergency.

Preparations for the programme have been finalised by the district administration.

Meanwhile, Parliamentary Affairs, Law, and Legal Affairs Minister Jogaram Patel will also be in Jodhpur on Thursday. He is scheduled to attend the IIT Jodhpur convocation, Antyodaya Pakhwada camp at Daijer at 12:25 P.M. and will also attend the Loktantra Senani Samman Samaroh at 2:30 P.M. He will depart for the airport at 3:40 P.M., and return to the Circuit House by 4:20 P.M. for an overnight stay.

Earlier, on Wednesday CM Sharma said, "The state government is ensuring that welfare schemes reach the person at the very last rung of society through the Deendayal Upadhyay Antyodaya Sambal Fortnight. An appeal is made to the general public and public representatives to motivate those in need so that they can directly benefit from these schemes."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Good to see CM focusing on both education and welfare schemes in one trip. IIT Jodhpur is making Rajasthan proud with its innovations. Hope the Antyodaya camps are reaching the truly needy people. 🙏
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Priya M.
While honoring Emergency fighters is important, I wish politicians would spend more time actually improving governance than just ceremonies. My father waited 6 months for his pension under Antyodaya scheme. Actions speak louder than speeches!
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Vikram S.
Jodhpur getting attention from top leadership is great! But why such a rushed visit? CM should stay longer to understand ground realities. Our blue city has so much potential in tourism and handicrafts that needs government support.
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Anjali T.
As an IIT Jodhpur alumna, I'm thrilled to see our institute getting recognition! Hope the CM announces more research funding. Also, the Emergency commemoration is timely - we must never forget how precious our democracy is. 🇮🇳
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Sanjay P.
Typical political drama...one day visit with 3 photo ops. Instead of these showpiece events, why not implement one good policy properly? Rajasthan's education system still ranks among the worst in India despite having IITs.
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Neha R.
The Antyodaya camps are a good initiative but need better awareness in villages. My NGO works in rural Rajasthan and many poor families don't know about these schemes. Government should involve local volunteers more actively.

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