Anupma Jaiswal is the education minister in Yogi Adityanath's government in Uttar Pradesh.

Highlights UP education minister Anupma Jaiswal made the latest gaffe

Minister Suresh Rana ordered food, water from outside at Dalit home

Another minister compared Dalit outreach to Lord Ram visiting Shabari

The BJP's dinner-with-Dalits outreach has produced another gaffe with a minister in Uttar Pradesh - yes, one more - talking about visiting Dalit homes and braving mosquito bites to ensure they receive government benefits.Anupma Jaiswal, the education minister in UP's Yogi Adityanath government, was talking about schemes for the poorest and describing how she felt "satisfaction" taking them to Dalits in villages despite the odds."So that the benefits are received, ministers are going to these people's houses and are being bitten by mosquitoes all night. Most importantly they feel good by the experience. If someone has been assigned two places, he says no, I want to go to four. Thus when there is satisfaction in work, it empowers us. Even I am doing more houses than allotted to me," said Ms Jaiswal.Two more ministers have recently messed up what was meant to be an exercise in endearing the ruling party to Dalits and establishing a connect with the underprivileged in a year of elections leading up to the 2019 national polls.One minister, Suresh Rana, dined at a Dalit home on Monday but went with an elaborate catered meal, bottled mineral water and cutlery.His Dalit host was baffled at the visitors and all the food from outside -- featuring palak paneer, chhole, dal makhni, pulao, tandoori roti and gulab jamun.Another minister, Rajendra Pratap Singh, likened the exercise to Lord Ram visiting the home of Shabari and "purifying" Dalits. "The Ram and Shabari interaction is described in the Ramayana. Today when I came here, when Gyan's mother served me food, she said she has been blessed serving this food...I am a Kshatriya, it is my duty to protect religion, society," he said, his words reinforcing the caste divides that the campaign aims at tackling.