Friday, November 15, 2024
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Celebrations in Telangana; Andhra CM to resign

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Hyderabad: The passage of Telangana Bill in Lok Sabha on Tuesday sparked celebrations across the ten districts of the region even as Chief Minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy, strongly espousing the cause for keeping the state united, appeared set to quit his post in protest.
Pro-integrationists denounced the move and seemed downcast as stage is now set for the creation of a separate state of Telangana once the Rajya Sabha also gives its nod. YSR Congress, in the forefront of the agitation against division of Andhra Pradesh, has called for a bandh on Wednesday in the state in protest against the passage of the Bill.
“This is the black day in the history of this country,” YSRC president and Kadapa MP, YS Jaganmohan Reddy, told reporters in Delhi. The ruling Congress suffered a setback in Coastal Andhra, with state Infrastructure and Investment Minister Ganta Srinivasa Rao quitting his post and the party in protest against the Centre going ahead with the state’s division.
“A decision (regarding division) was taken against people’s wishes…,” said Rao, a former MP and an influential leader in north coastal Andhra, who was elected in 2009 from Anakapalle in Visakhapatnam district on the ticket of Chiranjeevi’s Praja Rajyam, which later merged with Congress.
A defiant Chief Minister has invited his loyalist ministers and legislators for a meeting tomorrow to formally communicate his decision to quit, according to state Social Welfare Minister Pitani Satyanarayana.
“The Chief Minister will address a press conference at 10:45 AM and then proceed to Raj Bhavan to hand over his resignation to Governor ESL Narasimhan,” the minister, one of the his close followers, said.
As the news of the passage trickled in, chants of ‘Jai Telangana’ rented the air in many parts of the region, where a festive atmosphere prevailed with the separate statehood supporters bursting crackers, distributing sweets, taking out victory rallies and dancing to the tunes of popular songs hailing Telangana.
A large number of students gathered in Osmania University here, the nerve-centre of separate statehood agitation, and danced in joy.
Congress activists at some places in Telangana rejoiced distributing sweets and held pictures showing their party president Sonia Gandhi in the image of ‘Telangana Talli’ (Telangana mother).
“Greetings to Telangana people. This is the result of a long struggle. The bill will be passed in Rajya Sabha tomorrow. We thank Sonia Gandhi, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, BJP leaders Sushma Swaraj, CPI General Secretary Sudhakar Reddy and each one of those who supported separate Telangana bill. We are actually at loss of words to express our joy,” Telangana Joint Action Committee (JAC) chairman M Kodandaram said.
APNGOs, a powerful union of employees from Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema who have been agitating against the division, slammed the passage of the Bill.
“People will not forget this. They will teach a lesson to this government. People (of Seemandhra) need not feel sad. We have to move ahead in such a way the loss is minimal on account of state’s division,” APNGOs’ president P Ashok Babu, who also heads the forum for protection of united AP, said in Delhi.
Security in Seemandhra region of Andhra Pradesh was on Tuesday beefed up and forces were put on alert to meet any eventuality on law and order front.
“We are monitoring the situation… police in districts have already been asked to be on alert… depending upon the situation we will take appropriate action,” Additional DGP (Law and Order) VSK Kaumudi said. (PTI)

‘Pepper spray’ MP quits politics

New Delhi: Seemandhra MP L Rajagopal, who had created a storm by splashing pepper spray in Lok Sabha, on Tuesday resigned from Parliament and announced quitting politics, saying he was ‘hurt’ as Telugu people have been divided following the passage of Telangan bill in Lok Sabha.
Rajagopal, an expelled member of Congress, said he has sent his resignation to the Lok Sabha Secretariat and he would meet Speaker Meira Kumar on Wednesday to press for its acceptance.
The Vijayawada MP’s action came within hours after the controversial bill was passed by the Lok Sabha.
The Speaker had suspended 16 Seemandhra MPs, including Rajagopal who opposes Telangana state, after the pepper spray incident on February 13 and they could not attend the House on Tuesday.
“I submit my resignation from Lok Sabha. I am quitting politics too. I’m hurt as Telugu-speaking people are divided now. It is a sad day. I lost interest in politics,” Rajagopal said.
The industrialist-politician said he had announced in the year 2009 at the peak of pro-Telangana agitation that he would quit politics if a separate state is formed.
“Formation of separate Telangana is not in the interest of Telugu-speaking people and the nation as a whole,” he said.
He said he would work for the unity of Telugu-speaking people. “I have formed an NGO Rajagopal Foundation. I will now work for the unity of Telugu-speaking people,” Rajagopal said.
Asked whether he regrets the pepper spray attack in the House, which had attracted widespread condemnation, he said, “I did everything for the unity of Andhra Pradesh”. (PTI)

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