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        Politics permeates the world's largest religious festival


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Up to 150 million people are expected to travel to the Festival City of Prayagraj to bathe at the confluence of three rivers considered sacred by Hinduism - the Ganges, Yamuna and the third in myth, Saraswati. From January 15 to March 31 this year, Hindus believed that bathing in the Ganges during Kumbh could pardon sinners.
According to the state government, the federal government and Uttar Pradesh government, controlled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Indian nationalist BJP, are spending nearly $600 million on this huge event.
Some Hindu religious and political figures say they expect returns not only from the gods, but also from voters, when Moody is competing for a second term in elections that must be held in May.
Indian activists also used the incident to support a highly controversial project to build a Hindu temple on the site of the 16th century Babri Mosque, which was destroyed by a Hindu mob in 1992. The attack triggered community riots and led to death. About 2,000 people, many of them Muslims.
Sherikant Sharma, the leader and cabinet minister of the Uttar Pradesh government, denied that Kumbh was used to get political scores before the election and said people wrongly accused the Party of promoting a hard-line Hindu cause.


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