The fight between AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal and BJP's Prime Ministerial candidate Narendra Modi for supremacy in this temple town has divided students of IIT, Varanasi into two camps who will campaign for their chosen candidate in their own ways.
"I would have supported Kejriwal, but I was not happy with the way he performed in Delhi. He should have proved himself. Running a nation involves a lot of things which includes your economic and other policies. Modi is a tested brand and he has shown his mettle in Gujarat," says 21-year-old Archit Bindal.
Bindal, an electrical branch student at the IIT whose establishment is intimately linked with that of the Banaras Hindu University (BHU), will along with other Modi-supporter friends campaign in his own way.
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Preetam Machi (22), another Modi supporter, a fourth year mining student says, "Congress is out of race."
"Just in case AAP gets in a position to form the government it cannot form the government without Congress. So what is the use of supporting AAP here?" he wonders.
Prabhakar Gautam (21), another fourth year student from electrical branch and an AAP volunteer on campus, says he was inspired by Kejriwal's book 'Swaraj'. He also wants the former civil servant to win elections from Varanasi.
"I know it is a one-sided contest here and it is going to be a tough battle for AAP. A majority of our students on campus are Modi supporters. Despite this, I want Kejriwal to be in the Lok Sabha and play a role of an effective opposition," Gautam says.
On campus, he canvasses for the party and is planning to actively campaign for Kejriwal in the run-up to the election.
Despite the two camps, these tech students engage in healthy political debate every evening outside their hostels.
They discuss about the leaders' vision for the country and other aspects like economic and foreign policy.