He also hoped that Priyanka Gandhi will campaign outside party bastions of Amethi and Rae Bareli.
"It would be a fight of principles and a direct contest between secular and communal forces," said the former Union Minister.
Azad, who arrived here to a rousing reception by party workers, was talking to reporters after his day-long interactions with senior party leaders and office-bearers.
To a query, Azad, who had yesterday favoured Priyanka campaigning outside Amethi and Rae Bareli, once again hoped that she would take time out for the other parts of the state.
He also said the party will declare the name of its chief ministerial candidate at the "right time" as there was "no dearth of faces" for the post.
"But, the selection will be on the basis of leadership qualities and capabilities and not on caste and communal lines," he said.
Azad, for whom this is the fourth stint as in-charge of party affairs in UP, said this time around, he saw the state moving towards "communalism".
"Congress has always advocated secularism. It will fight whichever party comes before it to safeguard secularism," he said.
In the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, Congress had secured only two
seats from UP with Sonia and Rahul Gandhi emerging victorious from their family strongholds of Rae Bareli and Amethi respectively.
The party is trying to regain its lost moorings in the state where it currently has only 29 MLAs in the 403-member Assembly.
"The country will have to suffer for this...Congress will not allow polarisation in the name of religion," he stressed.
Noting that communalism has been on the rise in the country in the recent years, Azad said the issue being taken up in Parliament thrice in as many years was indicative of this.
"Central ministers and senior BJP leaders are vitiating the atmosphere and Prime Minister Narendra Modi maintains silence...This proves it is a planned move," said the former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister.
"Today's meeting was organised by Khatriji who is facing a problem of slip disc. Hence, he could not take part," Azad said, adding that no one has been appointed UPCC chief in Khatri's place.
Congress has been in political wilderness in UP since 1989 following the emergence of 'Mandal-Mandir' politics and rise of BSP which took away its crucial Dalit vote base.
Mayawati's party had also lured a large chunk of Brahmin votes in the past when candidates of the community were given tickets by her to contest elections.
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