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Ministerial panel meets on Telangana

Published: 12 Oct 2013 - 07:01 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 07:00 pm

New Delhi/Hyderabad: The ministerial panel set up to work out modalities for formation of a separate Telangana held its first meeting yesterday while Seemandhra started limping back to normalcy with electricity employees resuming work and teachers also calling off their strike though protests continued.

In Delhi, Telugu Desam Party (TDP) chief N Chandrababu Naidu was yesterday taken to the Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital from the venue of his fast at Andhra Bhavan even as hundreds of his supporters tried to stop police from moving him. 

The Group of Ministers (GoM) meeting in Delhi discussed a broad outline of issues relating to the proposed bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh against the backdrop of widespread protests over the union cabinet’s decision to carve out India’s 29th state.

“The GoM discussed the approach and methodology to be adopted by it,” said a home ministry statement.

Keeping in mind the large scale protests in Seemandhra — as the coastal Andhra and Rayalseema regions are jointly called — the GoM assured the state’s people that “the relevant issues as well as their concerns would be addressed with fairness and objectivity”. 

It promised to take the “opinion of stake-holders on all important subjects while formulating its recommendations”.

According to the home ministry statement, the GoM will look into various aspects like water sharing, finances, law and order, and formulating a legal framework.

Information will also be sought from the state government on these issues and the process will start immediately, said officials.

The next meeting of the GoM, on October 19, will be a full-fledged one and will discuss the parameters of the bifurcation, said officials.

Andhra Pradesh secretariat employees from Seemandhra in Hyderabad Friday called off their 38-day-long strike following talks with Chief Minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy. 

The employees’ leaders claimed that Kiran Reddy assured them the state would remain united as long as he was the chief minister.

After five days of strike, electricity generation and transmission was restored as employees returned to work. They had Thursday agreed to call off their strike in view of the cyclone threat to the state. The storm from the Bay of Bengal is expected to hit the land by Saturday night. 

Over two lakh teachers also “temporarily” called off their strike after talks with the chief minister. The schools and colleges will reopen on October 17 after Dussehra and Eid holidays.

However, over six lakh government employees in all 13 Seemandhra districts continued their two-month long strike, with their leader P Ashok Babu making it clear that the strike would continue till a clear assurance that the state would not be split.

Though employees of state-owned Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC) are reportedly willing to end the strike, the talks between their leaders and the chief minister did not take place yesterday.

IANS