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      | Harigaon, Feb 19 : Mauritius Prime Minister   Navinchandra Ramgoolam's ancestral village in Bihar's Bhojpur district has been   decked up like a bride by the residents and local administration to welcome him   Tuesday.  Ramgoolam will visit Harigaon village, about 70 km from Patna,   Tuesday afternoon and spend about three hours there. He will fly into the   village from the state capital in an Indian Air Force helicopter.
 
 |  |  Ranvijay Singh, who claims to be a relative of Ramgoolam, said: "The entire   village is decorated like a bride. Children have put up colourful flags, dozens   of colourful welcome gates have been erected and all the roads   cleaned."
 Villagers have been eagerly looking forward to the Mauritius   prime minister's visit.
 
 "We are happy and excited that Navinchandra   Ramgoolam is visiting Harigaon, his ancestral village. We are proud of him.   After all, a son of the soil rose to become prime minister of Mauritius,"   Dhaneshwar Mahto, in his 60s, told IANS.
 
 A group of women will sing   Bhojpuri folk songs to welcome the Mauritius prime minister while schoolchildren   will greet him at the helipad.
 
 "It is no less than a festival for   villagers here. After all, a grandson of this village, who became the Mauritius   prime Minister, is coming to pay respects to his roots," said Santosh Singh, a   villager in his late 20s.
 
 Ramgoolam will Tuesday lay the foundation   stones of various development projects in his ancestral village. On Monday, he   announced $250,000 for the development of roads and a hospital here.
 
 Till   a month ago, Harigaon was like any other village in rural Bihar - without roads,   electricity and a health centre. But it has been given a facelift after Chief   Minister Nitish Kumar paid a visit here last month following its identification   as the ancestral village of former Mauritius prime minister Sir Seewoosagur   Ramgoolam, the father of Navinchandra Ramgoolam.
 
 Now, all the dusty lanes   have been covered by concrete, solar lights installed, and the village pond   beautified and named after the Mauritius prime minister's grandfather Mohit   Ramgoolam.
 
 Mohit Ramgoolam was one of the hundreds of labourers forcibly   taken by the British from Bihar to work in Mauritius sugarcane plantations in   1871. About 60 percent of the 1.2 million population of Mauritius is of Indian   origin, a large number of them from Bihar with Bhojpuri as their mother   tongue.
 
 The Bihar government is now planning to develop Harigaon as a   model village with a hospital, school as well as other basic infrastructure, and   turn it into a tourist spot, especially for visitors from   Mauritius.
 
 Ramgoolam, who arrived in Bihar Monday on a three-day visit,   was overcome by emotion when he landed in Patna. The Mauritius prime minister   touched the ground after alighting from the aircraft and smeared some mud on his   forehead.
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