Bihar CM Vows to Evict Rabri Devi from Bungalow: ‘No One Has Hereditary Right Over State Property’

मुख्य बातें
- •Bihar Chief Minister Samrat Choudhary publicly vowed to evict RJD leader Rabri Devi from her official bungalow at 10, Circular Road, stating no one has a hereditary right to state housing.
- •The Building Construction Department issued a second eviction notice to Devi on May 29, 2026, followed by a 15-day ultimatum on May 31, with the bungalow reallocated to Minister Nand Kishor Ram.
- •Devi has refused to vacate and challenged the government to use police force, while BCD Minister Lesi Singh confirmed she will be shifted to a new residence at 39, Harding Road.
- •Choudhary cited his own modest living history and emphasized that official residences are for public service, not personal inheritance, and renamed the CM house to Lok Sevak Awas.
Bihar Chief Minister Samrat Choudhary has publicly declared that Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader Rabri Devi must vacate the official bungalow she currently occupies at 10, Circular Road in Patna, emphasizing that no individual has a hereditary entitlement to state-provided housing. Speaking at the Sahyog Camp in Muzaffarpur on Tuesday, June 2, 2026, Choudhary stated that Devi would have to leave the residence "at any cost," rejecting the notion that such accommodations are passed down through generations.

