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Home  » News » Congress rules out U-turn on Telangana amid statehood demands

Congress rules out U-turn on Telangana amid statehood demands

Source: PTI
August 07, 2013 20:00 IST
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The Congress on Wednesday categorically ruled out going back on Telangana statehood decision even as it set up a four-member committee headed by Defence Minister A K Antony to address concerns arising out of the decision to carve out a separate state out of Andhra Pradesh.

"No...There is no question of going back. There are many other things to be decided. This (committee) is to implement the decision not to put the decision on hold," party spokesperson PC Chacko told reporters at the All India Congress Committee briefing. Earlier in the day, the party announced the setting up of the four-member committee. "Congress President Sonia Gandhi has constituted a four-member committee to hear the concerns being expressed arising out of the decision to form a new state of Telangana," AICC general secretary Janardan Dwivedi said.

Following the announcement on Telangana, there have been similar statehood demands in various parts of the country with some of them triggering violent protests in Assam and in Darjeeling in West Bengal. Besides Antony, Union minister M Veerappa Moily, a former in-charge of party affairs in Andhra Pradesh, current AICC in-charge Digvijay Singh and political secretary to Congress president Ahmed Patel are members of the panel.

Chacko said that there were indeed two opinions among party leaders and that the Congress was also divided on the issue but added," We have to now implement the decision taken by the Congress working committee, the highest decision making body of the party."

The CWC had passed the resolution for the creation of a separate Telangana on July 30 bringing to an end to its dithering on the issue for several years.

Asked what will be the next move if the Andhra Pradesh state assembly does not pass a unanimous resolution for creation of Telangana when it is not mandatory, Chacko said, "Naturally they should get the opportunity to discuss it and pass the resolution. This question comes only when they do not pass it."

Chacko also dismissed the Bharatiya Janata Party's criticism that the Congress was dilly-dallying over the creation of Telangana and asked why the National Democratic Alliance government did not create the separate state out of Andhra Pradesh, when they had carved out Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand and Jharkhand.

Seven Union ministers from the Seema-Andhra region had met the Congress president on Tuesday night and apprised her of the "sense of deprivation" prevailing in the Andhra and Rayalseema regions over the Telangana decision.

During the meeting, Gandhi told them that a committee of senior leaders will be formed, which will look into their grievances, as the ministers told her about apprehensions among people in their constituencies. Ministers, including M M Pallam Raju, K S Rao, K Chiranjeevi, J D Seelam, Panabaka Lakshmi, D Purandheswari and Kruparani Killi, are learnt to have raised the demand that Hyderabad should be retained as permanent common capital of two Telugu-speaking states on the lines of Chandigarh.

Talking to reporters after the meeting, Chiranjeevi had said that Gandhi assured them that the grievances of the people from Andhra and Rayalaseema regions will be taken care of. Raju had said, "Our people are feeling insecure because of some of the pronouncements made by Telangana leaders and there is feeling of deprivation... We represented those matters. She wanted us to express our opinion to the committee..."

Image: People of Andhra protest against a separate Telangana state

Photograph: SnapsIndia

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