Today, Rahul Gandhi will go to Srinagar for a personal visit
Today, Rahul Gandhi will go to Srinagar for a personal visit
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According to party sources, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi will leave New Delhi on Thursday to visit Ladakh for two days.

According to the rumours, Rahul Gandhi would spend Thursday and Friday in Ladakh.

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Srinagar and Jammu were two of the places in Jammu and Kashmir that Rahul Gandhi had previously visited, but he was unable to travel to Ladakh.

However, the party source did not mention any more activities.

During his Bharat Jodo Yatra, Rahul stopped in Jammu and Srinagar in January of this year.

He paid another personal visit to Jammu and Kashmir in February of this year, but was unable to travel to Ladakh.

Sources indicated on Friday that the Congress leader is planning to travel to Europe starting in the second week of September. His itinerary is expected to include stops in Belgium, Norway, and France.

The Congress lawmaker will reportedly go to Europe in the second week of September to meet with EU lawmakers, members of the Indian diaspora, and college students.

They stated that he will travel to Belgium, Norway, and France.

This international excursion follows on the heels of his 10-day US tour that kicked out in May.

The Congress leader’s last tour took him to San Francisco, Washington, DC, and New York City, where he spoke with members of the Indian diaspora, investors, and politicians.

Since his address at Cambridge University in London earlier this year, in which he claimed that Indian democracy is under threat and attack, Rahul Gandhi’s overseas excursions have come under scrutiny.

The Indian democracy is under strain and attack, Rahul Gandhi said in a lecture at Cambridge University in the UK, and “everybody knows and it’s been in the news a lot.” In India, I serve as a leader of the opposition. We are learning to go around in that (Contrary) area. Constraints are being placed on the institutional structure necessary for a democracy, including Parliament, a free press, a court, and even the concept of mobilisation and freedom of movement. As a result, the foundations of India’s democratic system are being threatened.

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