Reported By: Pallavi Ghosh
Last Updated: August 08, 2023, 16:09 IST
According to Housing Committee sources, the house is vacant and the Wayanad MP is to get the bungalow back.
(Photo: PTI file)
Rahul Gandhi was allotted 12, Tughlaq Lane bungalow in 2004 when he became a Member of Parliament (MP) for the first time from Uttar Pradesh’s Amethi
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, who was reinstated as Lok Sabha MP following the Supreme Court’s stay on his conviction in the “Modi” surname case, is likely to be re-allotted his old home— the official government bungalow at 12, Tughlaq Lane in New Delhi.
According to Housing Committee sources, the house is vacant and the Wayanad MP is likely to get the bungalow back.
“Mera ghar poora Hindustan hai,” said the Congress leader when asked to comment on the development.
#WATCH | “Mera ghar poora Hindustan hai,” says Congress MP Rahul Gandhi when asked for a reaction on getting back his official residence as an MPHe has arrived at the AICC Headquarters for a meeting with the leaders of Assam Congress. pic.twitter.com/MZ97d2Aajm
— ANI (@ANI) August 8, 2023
Rahul Gandhi was allotted 12, Tughlaq Lane bungalow in 2004 when he became a Member of Parliament (MP) for the first time from Uttar Pradesh’s Amethi. Over the years, 12, Tughlaq Lane emerged as the second power centre to 10, Janpath, the residence of his mother Sonia Gandhi.
RaGa’s Disqualification & Return to Parliament | Timeline
On April 22, the former Congress chief vacated his official residence and moved to 10 Janpath in the national capital.
सच्चाई बोलने की कीमत है आज कल!वो जो भी कीमत होगी, मैं चुकाता जाऊंगा। pic.twitter.com/1ZN6rbGFIu
— Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi) April 22, 2023
On March 24, Gandhi was convicted and sentenced to two years in jail by the Surat metropolitan court after finding him guilty in the defamation case filed by BJP MLA from Surat Purnesh Modi. A day later, he was disqualified as a Member of Parliament.
Last month, the Gujarat High Court refused to stay his conviction in the case. However, on August 4, the Supreme Court stayed Rahul Gandhi’s conviction in the Modi surname case paving the way for him to return to the Parliament.
Addressing an election rally in Karnataka’s Kolar in 2019, Rahul Gandhi said, “Why all the thieves, be it Nirav Modi, Lalit Modi or Narendra Modi, have Modi as the common surname?”