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Just six months since the grand opening of the Ram Temple in Ayodhya, the first round of showers has caused heavy waterlogging in the temple town raising questions over its swift and massive infrastructure overhaul.
The newly built Ram Path road in Ayodhya - which leads to the Ram Temple - has suffered several cave-ins since seasonal rain hit the temple town.
After potholes came up on the 14-km stretch, authorities said they immediately got the road repaired to avoid any inconvenience for the devotees. The Yogi Adityanath government has suspended six civic officials over "gross negligence," officials said.
Ayodhya mayor Girish Pati Tripathi said that efforts to flush out the rainwater were launched soon after the waterlogging was reported.
Leakage was also reported at the temple after heavy rain at midnight last Saturday. The Chief Priest of the Ram Temple, had on Monday claimed that rainwater that was leaking from the roof of the temple was collecting inside the complex. He also claimed that there was no arrangement to flush out the rainwater from the temple premises.
Rejecting the leakage claims, Champat Rai, General Secretary of the Temple Trust, however, said "not a single drop of water" dripped from the roof, nor had water entered the Sanctum Sanctorum or 'Garbha Griha'.from anywhere. He also said that "excellent arrangements" have been made at the temple to drain rainwater.
Nripendra Misra, chairman of the Ram Temple Construction Committee, had earlier said that the alleged water leakage at the Ram Mandir was "expected because the Guru Mandap is exposed to the sky" as the construction work was still on, but the water never entered the 'Garbha Griha'.