PATNA, May 30 -- Former Bihar chief minister and RJD leader Rabri Devi has received yet another eviction notice - the third since November 2025 - from the building construction department (BCD) directing her to vacate the prime 10 Circular Road bungalow. The bungalow has now been officially allotted to Nand Kishore Ram, minister for dairy, fisheries, and animal husbandry. According to the notice issued on May 27, the bungalow is reassigned to minister Ram. He was earlier allotted 21 Hardinge Road bungalow, but has been staying in his assembly-allotted residence as the new bungalow reportedly requires repairs. Department officials stated the eviction follows due process and approval from the competent authority, referencing a prior order from November 25, 2025, that allotted Rabri Devi an alternative residence at 39 Hardinge Road as leader of opposition in the Bihar legislative council. Rabri Devi, who has occupied 10 Circular Road since around 2005 (after stepping down as CM), has not shifted despite the earlier allotment. The notice urges her to hand over the keys and move without further delay. Government bungalows in Circular Road and Hardinge Road areas are considered premium residences for ministers, senior officials and key opposition leaders. Allotments are adjusted based on portfolios, roles and administrative needs. This move aligns with standard practice for efficient use of official housing, especially after portfolio changes after Samrat Choudhary took over as the chief minister. Rabri Devi served as Bihar's chief minister from 1997 to 2005 (the state's first woman CM, succeeding her husband Lalu Prasad). She has been leader of opposition in the legislative council since 2018. The Lalu-Rabri family has long used 10 Circular Road as a political hub. RJD chief spokesman Shakti Singh Yadav has reacted strongly to the development, describing it as an attempt to humiliate Rabri Devi. In statements around similar notices (including earlier ones), he expressed surprise at the government changing a residence allotted to a former CM and sitting leader of opposition for over two-and-a-half decades, questioning the rules under which it was done. He has framed the repeated notices as politically motivated, especially given the bungalow's historical association with the Yadav family and Lalu Prasad's health needs. RJD leaders have previously asserted that Rabri Devi "will not vacate" when she was served the second eviction letter in May this year and accused the NDA (particularly under BJP influence) of malice or appeasement tactics. Similar sentiments are expected in response to the latest May 27 notice. No official reaction from Rabri Devi herself has been reported yet, but the party is likely to view this as laced with political undertones amid Bihar's high political temperature ahead of future elections. Past episodes have sometimes led to negotiations, court intervention or public skirmishes....