Ayodhya: Champat Rai, the central vice president of Vishwa Hindu Parishad, who has been very active in the long battle over the Ram temple, believes that the temple will be constructed according to the model proposed by the Ramjanmabhoomi Nyas. Newly appointed General Secretary of Sri Ramjanmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Champat Rai said that it is not right to reject the model proposed by the Trust in the name of the skyscraper. Condition of Congress deteriorated due to posterity in MP, supporters advises Scindia to leave party According to the information received, Champat Rai, who reached Ayodhya on Friday, 21 February 2020, after the first meeting of Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Tirtha Kshetra Trust in Delhi, said that the truth is that after the independence of the country no temple of such height was built. A temple 141 feet high from the ground surface will be called a skyscraper. The General Secretary of the Tirtha Kshetra Trust also defines the grandeur of the proposed temple by the Trust by giving an overview of the temples of the Swaminarayan sect considered synonymous with grandeur. By stating that the temples of Swaminarayan, which are synonymous with grandeur, are 104–105 feet high and its premises may be large, but the area of the temple is the same as the area of the temple of Ram Janmabhoomi Nyas. He also does not forget to clarify that the height of a temple is not as important, but the corridor and complex determines the grandeur of a building or temple and in this direction the Vikas Tirth Kshetra Trust does not lack land. Suspense increases in Sidhu's politics, speculation of joining AAP He said that 70 acres of land is not less. If needed for Dharamshala, Goshala and Solid Waste Management, land can be taken elsewhere and it is not necessary that the Ramjanmabhoomi should be adjoining the premises and acquired land for construction of the temple. Rai said that in the next two years, so much construction will be done that it can be seen even from a distance. Punjab: Amarinder government takes new decision on 200 units of free electricity