In Gujarat, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home city of Vatnagar reached, the Indian government was able to realize that the function of the 'Swat Bharat Abhiyan' or 'Purity India', which is an ambitious project, is functional.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi was born in the town of Watnagar in the district of McDonnell and spent the early days of his life.
Being the Prime Minister's own village, it is being developed as a historic tourist destination.
When a BBC reporter went to Rohit Vas, a Dalit community in Vadnagar, the news on his program showed that "you entered the Vatnagar WiFi zone".
The public Wi-Fi facility provided by the government worked well. But when he asked about the toilet on the side, localers pointed to a nearby field that used to stutter in the open air.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi was born in the town of Watnagar in the district of McDonnell and spent the early days of his life.
Being the Prime Minister's own village, it is being developed as a historic tourist destination.
When a BBC reporter went to Rohit Vas, a Dalit community in Vadnagar, the news on his program showed that "you entered the Vatnagar WiFi zone".
The public Wi-Fi facility provided by the government worked well. But when he asked about the toilet on the side, localers pointed to a nearby field that used to stutter in the open air.
Suman, Hedvi, Monica, Bisva, Ankita and Neha are students from Vadnagar's Rohdev Vas Mohalla School.
When asked about their bathroom facilities, these women took the BBC journalist to open the stadium in the open air every morning.
Vatnakaril the Rohit Was the sewers all open, there is a 30-year-old tansa Ben. "Little children, young women, the stadium went open shit to spend. Our survive a home there. Our Nobody housing is not provided. The bathrooms nobody listens. Everyday we open stools after a visit Nrom "he added.
Next to Tanna Penn, Nirmala Ben is a resident of Vatnagar and housewife.
He told the BBC that the collapse was not fulfilled by the promise made to the villagers.
"Our houses were promised to be with the roof and good toilet but we were not given anything," he said.
Referring to the Prime Minister's visit to Vatnagar on October 8, he said, "As the present election comes, they have reminded us of our old homeland Vatnagar, but for years we have not come to hear our problems and nobody has heard us.
According to local residents, there are about 30,000 people in the city with no 500 toilet facilities.
These 500 houses belong to the other backward castes and Dalit Mehallas sections, including Rohit Vas, Otas Vas, Kowalaz, Thakur Vas and Debibog Vas.
In the midst of open drains, broken drains and broken roads, the BBC journalist walked in the narrow lane of Rohit Vas, and saw a lady's clothes in front of a roomy house.
With modern medical and technology facilities, the Government recently announced that Rs 550 crore would be provided to develop Vatanagar as a historic tourist destination.
This fund included the ambitious project to build a multi-hospital and medical college in Vadnagar at Rs 450 crore.
These announcements go with water in red tapas. The 70-year-old man who was stabbed openly in the morning every morning did not make any changes in the woman's life.
The two open camps for men and women in Rohit Vas Mohalla are clearly evidence that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's own village has not been able to build a toilet in rural India in the 'Clean India' project.
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