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Telangana set to be India’s 29th state

Published: 31 Jul 2013 - 01:50 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 01:26 pm


Osmania University students celebrate after India’s ruling Congress party endorsed statehood for the Telangana region of Andhra Pradesh, in Hyderabad, yesterday.

New Delhi/Hyderabad: Telangana is all set to become India’s 29th state as the Congress Working Committee (CWC) yesterday urged the government to take constitutional steps in this regard.

The new state will comprise 10 districts including Hyderabad, which will be the common capital for 10 years, during which period Andhra Pradesh will build its own capital.

The CWC, the highest decision-making body of the Congress, passed a resolution after the United Progressive Alliance’s co-ordination committee endorsed statehood for Telangana earlier in the day.

Congress leader Digvijaya Singh said the new state will come into being in four to five months.

Congress spokesman Ajay Maken said the CWC meeting was presided over by party president Sonia Gandhi and attended by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh among others. Both strongly pitched for Telangana.

Manmohan Singh told the meeting that the formation of Telangana was very much required “for the development of the entire Andhra region”.

“It is resolved to request the central government to take steps to form a separate state of Telangana,” Maken said, reading from the resolution.

Digvijaya Singh said the issue would go to the Andhra Pradesh assembly, whose resolution will be sent to the union cabinet, which will appoint a group of ministers to look into issues relating to sharing of water, electricity and safety and security of all three regions of the state.

The CWC decision followed protracted discussions in the party following divisions between its leaders in Andhra Pradesh favouring statehood to Telangana and those opposed to it.

Celebrations broke out in Telangana after Congress leaders announced the decision. Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS), Telangana Joint Action Committee (JAC) and other groups were jubilant.

TRS chief K Chandrasekhara Rao, who reached party headquarters Telangana Bhavan to a warm welcome by his supporters, welcomed the move but said he would not celebrate till the bill for Telangana was passed.

“We need to be cautious till the bill is passed by parliament in view of our past experience,” he said.

Reacting to Digvijaya Singh’s remark that the TRS had promised to merge with Congress if the Telangana demand was met, he said his party would take a decision after the bill was passed.

He also demanded clarification of the proposal to make Hyderabad the joint capital.

Groups seeking a united Andhra Pradesh expressed unhappiness with the decision and a shutdown has been called in the Seemandhra region (as coastal Andhra and Rayalseema are commonly known) today.

Guntur MP Rayapati Sambasiva Rao, of the Congress, and three legislators — two from the Congress and one from the Telugu Desam Party — resigned in protest.

Earlier, the UPA coordination committee endorsed statehood to Telangana.

“All parties unanimously decided in favour of Telangana,” Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh said after the meeting held at the prime minister’s official residence.

It was attended by leaders of constituent parties like the Congress, the Nationalist Congress Party, National Conference and Ajit Singh’s Rashtriya Lok Dal.

The decision by CWC fulfilled a five-decade-old demand of the people of Telangana. This will create two states for Telugu-speaking people.

The announcement ended a chapter in the history of Andhra Pradesh, which was formed on November 1, 1956.

Andhra Pradesh will become India’s first non-Hindi linguistic state to be divided. Carved out of Madras State in 1953, it was the first state to be formed on linguistic basis.

India’s fifth most populous state, with a population of 84.6 million, and spread over 275,000 square kilometres, it ranked fourth among states in geographical area.

IANS