Saturday, 12 October 2013

Financial package and new capital for Seemandhra

Centre to woo Seemandhra with financial package, new capital




Centre to woo Seemandhra with financial package, new capital
Home minister Sushilkumar Shinde had ruled out going back on the decision to create Telangana.
NEW DELHI: Government is likely to woo the Seemandhra region with special financial package for its all-round development and help build a new capital with modern amenities but is not in a mood to consider any change in the status of Hyderabad or make it a Union Territory.

The group of ministers, set up to deal with issues concerning bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh and which held its first meeting today, will try its best to assuage the feelings of Seemandhra region following the decision to create Telangana and offer a sizeable financial package for the all-round development of coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema, highly-placed sources said.

The central government will help the Seemandhra region to build a new capital but is unlikely to change the status of Hyderabad or make it a Union Territory as it would create more problem in Telangana region.

The Union Cabinet on October 3 had decided that Hyderabad will be joint capital of the two states for 10 years.

During its deliberations, the GoM will elicit response from ministries of water resources, power, finance, road transport and a few others on issues concerning division of assets, sources said.

The GoM has no plan to visit Andhra Pradesh. The ministerial panel will look into the sharing of river water, irrigation resources and other natural resources, especially coal, water, oil and gas between the two states and also inter-se with other states, including the declaration of Polavaram Irrigation Project as a national project.

Decisions will also be taken by GoM on issues arising on account of distribution of assets, public finance, public corporations and liabilities between the two states.

Sources said the GoM will meet again on October 19 which is a clear indication that it was trying to expedite the process of creation of Telangana, notwithstanding protests in Seemandhra region.

On Thursday, home minister Sushilkumar Shinde, who heads the GoM, had ruled out going back on the decision to create Telangana.

"I do not think there is any possibility of going back to the decision to create Telangana," he said.

Fighting Fire In Seemandhra

The Congress plans to offer a special package to quell the rebellion over the Telangana decision. But will that be enough? Ashhar Khan and G Vishnu report
On the rampage Anti-Telangana activists vandalise Rajiv Gandhi’s statue in Kurnool
On the rampage: Anti- activists vandalise Rajiv Gandhi’s statue in Kurnool. Photo: AP
It was obvious to the  high command that granting statehood to was fraught with perils. As people vented their anger in  (the residual part of Andhra Pradesh comprising coastal Andhra and ) by calling for bandhs and torching statues of Rajiv Gandhi and Indira Gandhi, nervous party leaders are hoping the frenzy will die down soon.
The  is more worried about holding on to its seven MPs from  who are threatening to abandon the party before the Food Security Bill is tabled in Parliament.
Even as  MPs from  were celebrating that the party leadership had acquiesced to their longstanding demand for a separate state, seven Lok Sabha MPs and one Rajya Sabha MP hailing from the Andhra region tendered their resignations. More than 25 MLAs also threatened to resign.
However, Chief Minister Kiran Kumar Reddy and Pradesh  Committee (PCC) chief Botsa Satyanarayana pacified the MLAs by presenting a resolution to party general secretary Digvijaya Singh on 5 August. “We have requested the party high command to maintain status quo and avoid bifurcation,” says Satyanarayana. “If is indeed inevitable, then we want  to be a Union Territory or the shared capital.”
When the  Working Committee announced its decision on  on 30 July, jittery Union ministers hailing from  made a beeline to their constituencies to get a first-hand assessment of the ground situation. They included Union Human Resource Development Minister MM Pallam Raju, a four-time MP from Kakinada.
On 2 August, they regrouped in New Delhi and decided to convey the anti-mood prevalent in the region to the party high command. Despite burning the phone lines, all they could muster was an appointment with Digvijaya Singh.
Armed with their resignations, the delegation of ministers, which also included JD Seelam, D Purandeswari, J Surya Prakash Reddy and Kruparani Killi, met Singh. The meeting lasted for two hours, where they tried to impress upon Singh that they would be committing political suicide if they failed to send a strong signal that they were against the creation of . The ministers also conveyed that apart from their own future, the party’s fortunes were also at stake in Andhra.
Singh acknowledged that the party leadership was aware of their problems but was adamant that tendering resignations was no solution. Finally, it was decided that Singh will propose to party president Sonia Gandhi the setting up of a high-level committee to look into all the issues and remove imbalances.
This committee, headed by Defence Minister AK Antony, will interact with the leaders of Andhra and  before the new state of  comes up. This move has pacified the ministers, at least for the time being.
The  is also planning to cool the simmering anger by announcing special packages, which will include many welfare schemes and a favourable water-sharing agreement.
 leaders believe that some resignations are inevitable. “While taking the decision, the party had taken into account the resignations that will pour in,” says a senior  leader, adding that the party leaders will have to work overtime to douse the fire in their constituencies. They believe that the anti- mood will subside with the passage of time.
 insiders claim that the trouble witnessed in the  region were in areas that predominantly are strongholds of either the Telugu Desam Party () led by former chief minister Chandrababu Naidu or Jaganmohan Reddy’s . The  has little hold in these areas.
Dismissing rumours that some MLAs and MPs are planning to abandon ship and join Jagan’s party, a senior  leader from Andhra told Tehelka on the condition of anonymity that the deserters would not be more than three MLAs and two MPs, whereas leaders from other parties might join the .
Five senior  leaders from  have already resigned. Konda Surekha, a leader from Warangal, her husband Konda Murali, Balakrishna Reddy, KK Mahendar Reddy, Raj Thakur and Puvvada Ajay Kumar tendered their resignation to party president Vijayamma on 31 July. Rumour has it that they will join either the or the .
“The bifurcation of the state will improve the ’ chances in Andhra and regions,” says  MP Madhu Goud, who represents Nizamabad in. “Some of the MPs who are threatening to quit are the same ones who had earlier signed a letter backing Jagan Reddy as chief minister.”
But  leaders beg to differ. “The  did not consult any of the parties before deciding to bifurcate the state. It’s only in  that some of our MLA aspirants are leaving. In coastal Andhra and , members of both the and  will be joining our party soon, as we have a better winnability factor,” says senior leader DA Somayajulu.
In 2009, despite being an incumbent party, the  won 156 of 294 Assembly seats and 29 out of 42 seats in the Lok Sabha. In , it won 12 seats, whereas the  Rashtra Samiti (TRS) managed only one. Much of the ’ worries began after the then chief minister late YS Rajasekhara Reddy’s son Jagan started his own party and attracted renegades from the  and the . In the subsequent bypolls, Jagan’s party won 17 Assembly seats.
The  received a confidence boost from the recent sarpanch elections. Much to the party’s surprise, it topped the tally with 4,342 posts, followed by the  (4,275), (2,739) and the TRS (1,117). ’ performance was lacklustre in.
The prevalent thinking in the  is that the creation of  will prove to be a calculated risk. The first target is to capture all 17 Lok Sabha seats in the new state, including , which is represented by Asaduddin Owaisi of the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen.
Even though the TRS is yet to keep its promise of merging with the , once becomes a reality, the signs remain positive. “We will cross the bridge when we come to it,” says Kavita Rao Kalvakuntla, the daughter of TRS supremo K Chandrasekhar Rao. “Our terms are simple. We are willing to share  as the capital for 10 years, not any longer.  will be the 10th district of , and arrangements will be made for the Andhra administration to function from.”
Behind the theatrics, has the  actually managed to wriggle itself out of a mess? Whereas it is too premature to draw conclusions or map out the long-term political ramifications, the party does seem to be making all the right moves — pacifying wherever it’s necessary and readying to let go of bad apples.
(Published in Tehelka Magazine, Volume 10 Issue 33, Dated 17 August 2013)

Telangana: Centre to woo Seemandhra with new capital, financial package

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TelanganaCentre is not in a mood to consider any change in the status of Hyderabad or make it a Union Territory.
Government is likely to woo the Seemandhra region with special financial package for its all-round development and help build a new capital with modern amenities but is not in a mood to consider any change in the status of Hyderabad or make it a Union Territory.
The GoM, set up to deal with issues concerning bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh and which held its first meeting today, will try its best to assuage the feelings of Seemandhra region following the decision to create Telangana and offer a sizeable financial package for the all-round development of coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema, highly-placed sources said.

The central government will help the Seemandhra region to build a new capital but is unlikely to change the status of Hyderabad or make it a Union Territory as it would create more problem in Telangana region.

The Union Cabinet on October 3 had decided that Hyderabad will be joint capital of the two states for 10 years.

During its deliberations, the GoM will elicit response from ministries of Water Resources, Power, Finance, Road Transport and a few others on issues concerning division of assets, sources said.

The GoM has no plan to visit Andhra Pradesh.

The ministerial panel will look into the sharing of river water, irrigation resources and other natural resources, especially coal, water, oil and gas between the two states and also inter-se with other states, including the declaration of Polavaram Irrigation Project as a national project.

Decisions will also be taken by GoM on issues arising on account of distribution of assets, public finance, public corporations and liabilities between the two states.

Sources said the GoM will meet again on October 19 which is a clear indication that it was trying to expedite the process of creation of Telangana, notwithstanding protests in Seemandhra region.

Yesterday, Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde, who heads of the GoM, had ruled out going back on the decision to create Telangana.

"I do not think there is any possibility of going back to the decision to create Telangana," he said.

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