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Constitutional governance: Ram Mandir Trust members to vote July 6 on removing Champat Rai and Anil Mishra over ₹20.4 lakh donation theft; two-thirds majority needed.
The Ram Mandir Trust is scheduled to hold a crucial meeting on July 6, 2026, where members will vote on a proposal to remove Champat Rai (Trust Secretary) and Anil Mishra from their positions following the alleged theft of ₹20.4 lakh from donation collections. The removal proposal requires a two-thirds majority among Trust members. This incident has exposed governance lapses in one of India's most prominent religious institutions and raised questions about financial accountability, internal controls, and institutional oversight. Police investigation has recovered the stolen amount and revealed alleged negligence by senior Trust officials in safeguarding temple funds. VHP chief Alok Kumar acknowledged potential negligence while differentiating VHP's responsibility. The case highlights tensions between religious autonomy and accountability standards. Exam angles: (1) Autonomy of religious institutions vs. secular governance standards; (2) Financial accountability in trusts and charitable organizations; (3) Internal institutional democracy and decision-making; (4) Constitutional protections of religious freedom (Articles 25-28) vs. public interest; (5) Criminal accountability of public figures managing religious property. Expected questions on institutional governance, rule of law, and conflict between religious authority and secular accountability.
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