New Delhi:Not just the locals but a large number of NRIs too are campaigning for the Aam Aadmi Party in Delhi believing that party chief Arvind Kejriwal will bring in a change in the city. Hundreds of NRIs have flown into the city and are working on the ground as the national capital gears up for the Assembly polls on February 8.
Speaking to media, Convenor AAP Overseas Prithvi Reddy said close to 500 NRIs are in Delhi campaigning for the AAP on the ground. He said the NRIs are taking part in the party's campaigning and are seeking votes for the AAP, managing the volunteers and doing all kinds of tasks for the party.
Reddy said while some NRIs have come to Delhi in the last leg of the election, several others have been in the city from past two-three months.
"The support from the NRIs started with India Against Corruption. I think they (NRIs) look at the Aam Aadmi Party as a ray of hope. People go abroad as it offers them a better opportunity and a better living standard. However, they will always be a second-grade citizen there. They feel like an outsider there, so they feel and wish that they should go back home."
He said the AAP gives them hope that it will lead the country towards development so that the NRIs can return to the country and enjoy the same living standard that they enjoy abroad.
Explaining about the developed nations, he said that in foreign countries one has to pay taxes while the government takes care of education and health. "You don't have to pay again. But here (in India), you pay taxes and then pay expensive school fees and hospital bills."
"The money saved from these could be used for a better living standard. The AAP comes as a ray of hope here."
He said the AAP supporters continue to repose trust in the party and Kejriwal's leadership as it has fulfilled the promises.
"Prime Minister Modi was the hope and a rising star during the 2014 elections. But, everyone has seen that after five years, they have not delivered on the promises. But AAP fulfilled its promises and worked even harder than it promised," Reddy said.
He said that the public can sense that the AAP is bringing a positive change in the country.
Reddy said: "Right from the inception of the AAP, about 20 per cent of the election funding came from overseas supporters, including people from Canada, the UK, the US, Singapore, UAE among several others."
Adding on to Reddy's information, Kamal Garg, a software engineer based in Vancouver in Canada, told Media that the funding and support are coming from so many small countries that "we cannot even imagine that party can get support from such faraway lands".
Reddy said the NRIs see this as an investment in the country.
Speaking about Garg, Reddy said being a Punjabi, Garg is managing about 500 Punjabi volunteers in the city.
"Everyone is contributing in whatever way they can. Despite any position, the NRIs are working for AAP."