logo
Telangana govt to submit KLIP report to Ghose panel; clears infra projects, marks Rs 9,000 crore Rythu Bharosa rollout

Telangana govt to submit KLIP report to Ghose panel; clears infra projects, marks Rs 9,000 crore Rythu Bharosa rollout

Time of India11 hours ago

HYDERABAD: The Telangana cabinet, chaired by chief minister A Revanth Reddy, on Monday decided to submit a comprehensive report to the Justice PC Ghose Commission probing the lapses in the execution of Kaleshwaram Lift Irrigation Scheme (KLIS).
The submission will include whether the project received formal cabinet approval during the previous BRS regime, the rationale for constituting a cabinet sub-committee, and the extent to which its recommendations were implemented.
In other important decisions taken at the meeting, the cabinet approved the 201-km southern corridor of the Regional Ring Road, extending from Choutuppal to Sangareddy and an IIIT for Mahbubnagar.
Telangana Thalli statues will be installed in every district collectorate before Dec 9.
Briefing the media after the meeting at the state secretariat, revenue and housing minister Ponguleti Srinivas Reddy, along with ministers Vakiti Srihari and Ponnam Prabhakar, said the govt would submit all requested information on KLIS by June 30. "This includes details on what then engineers-many now retired-recommended, and the basis on which the Medigadda, Annaram, and Sundilla barrages were taken up," Srinivas Reddy said.
The cabinet also took a strong stand on the Banakacherla project, vowing to resist it at all costs to safeguard Telangana's share of river waters. Srinivas Reddy alleged that a 'vicious campaign' was being run to blame the Congress govt for the project, even though the foundation stone was laid during the previous BRS govt's tenure.
"To set the record straight, the govt will soon give a detailed power-point presentation to all elected representatives," he said.
Chief minister A Revanth Reddy, along with deputy chief minister Mallu Bhatti Vikramarka and other ministers, will address farmers at the Rythu Bharosa Vijayotsavam Sabha on Tuesday near the Rajiv Gandhi statue, opposite the Telangana Secretariat.
The event marks the state govt's achievement of depositing Rs 9,000 crore into the accounts of lakhs of farmers in just nine days.
The Congress-led govt is organising victory celebrations across all Rythu Vedikas, villages, and mandal headquarters.
On June 24, the final day of the celebrations, meetings will be held simultaneously across the state to showcase the govt's commitment to farmers and agriculture. The chief minister is expected to highlight the rollout of Rythu Bharosa and other key welfare measures from the main stage in Hyderabad.
'This is the first time in Telangana's history that Rs 9,000 crore has been credited to farmers' accounts in just nine days,' said Bhatti.
'While the previous BRS govt gave Rs 10,000 per acre per year, our govt is giving Rs 12,000 per acre annually. We are not only delivering more, but doing it faster and without discrimination,' he added.
Ahead of the event, agriculture minister Tummala Nageswara Rao, chief secretary Santhi Kumari, and senior officials from various departments reviewed the arrangements. Speaking after the review, Tummala said the Congress had a legacy of supporting farmers.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

FIRST PERSON: 50 years ago attempt was made to murder democracy, but ultimately Indians prevailed
FIRST PERSON: 50 years ago attempt was made to murder democracy, but ultimately Indians prevailed

Hans India

time18 minutes ago

  • Hans India

FIRST PERSON: 50 years ago attempt was made to murder democracy, but ultimately Indians prevailed

New Delhi: Fifty years ago, the night of June 25, an attempt was made to murder democracy, but ultimately, people's power prevailed, saving India. The Congress party that screams the loudest about democracy was the perpetrator of the heinous crime, throwing opposition politicians, both national and local, into jails, imposing physical censorship on the media and arresting editors, stifling public opinion and strong-arming the judiciary. It was 1975, when the summer of discontent over corruption and high-handedness gave rise to waves of fury against Indira Gandhi, whose legitimacy had been shattered by an Allahabad High Court verdict unseating her from Parliament for violations of the election laws. Riding the crest of a mass movement that began in Gujarat and rolled across the northern plains, Jayaprakash Narayan – JP as he was known – brought the spirit of the rebellion to the citadels of power in Delhi on June 25. At the Ramlila Maidan, a spot hallowed by the annual enactment of the drama of victory of good over evil, before a crowd of 100,000, JP thundered, "Singhasan Khaali Karo Ke Janata Aaati Hai, Leave Your Throne, the People Have Come." It was his call for Indira Gandhi to leave the prime ministership that she was clinging to with a temporary stay of the court verdict banning her from parliament. Presciently, he also called on the police and the Army to follow their conscience and not obey illegal orders. This writer, then a sub-editor with barely three years' experience on the overnight desk of the United News of India (UNI) news agency, witnessed firsthand the attack on democracy. The reporters and senior editors wrapped up the story of the day and headed home, leaving the desk to this writer, Arul Louis, the founding executive editor of IANS and now its correspondent in New York, and colleague Tarun Basu, a former chief editor of IANS. Just after midnight, ominous dispatches clacked on the teleprinter machines – the electrically driven typewriter-like machine linked through telephone lines -- in the pre-digital age. Reports dribbled in from Haryana, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, and Himachal Pradesh that trucks delivering newspapers were being stopped by police, and power was going out at newspaper offices and printing plants, while some local opposition politicians were being rounded up for unclear reasons. A Madhya Pradesh bureau passed on a rumour among local officials that "martial law" was coming. Unbeknownst to a sleeping nation, the Emergency had been declared. Sometime after 2 a.m., this writer picked up a ringing landline. The caller cryptically narrated what would shock the nation and change the course of modern Indian history: "JP giraftar ho gaye (JP has been arrested)'. A 10-letter bulletin went out on the wire service teleprinter network: F L A S H J P ARRESTED that marked the long night of fascist terror, 21 months marked by lathis and bullets, censorship, cowardice and despair – but also heroism, faith in democracy, unbending commitments, idealism and hope. This writer, called Myron L Belkind, the bureau chief of the Associated Press, to get the word out to the world before censorship struck and shut down communications. This writer and colleague ran to the nearby Parliament Street Police Station. In the dimly lit exterior of the colonnade building, the cops hadn't yet grasped the near-infinite power the Emergency had conferred on them and said politely that nothing was happening and to go away. Suddenly, there was a bustle, and the frail JP was brought out. Asked through the cordon of police in uniform and plain clothes around him what was happening, he gave a look of sadness, but behind it was a glint of steeliness. He said feebly: "Vinaashakaale Viparita Buddhi." Krishna Kant, a Congress party dissident and supporter of JP's movement who was under arrest alongside him, repeated louder for all to hear the Sanskrit saying that translates as, "Madness takes hold at the moment of disaster." JP was put in one of the white Ambassador tourist taxis and driven away. His kidneys failed during the harsh imprisonment. Back to the UNI office, a story was filed with his quote that became a motif of the opposition to the Emergency. GG Mirchandani, the fearless general manager of UNI, ordered that reports of the arrests and intimidation flow through the wires without being cowed down. Every ring of the phones brought news of more arrests – Morarji Desai, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Jyotirmoy Basu and many others, across the swath of politics. But two names were missing from the list of arrested: George Fernandes and Subramanian Swamy. Both had staged strategic disappearances to lead the resistance. Editors and reporters poured into the office as the night was fading, to write the first draft of a tragic history in the making. The UNI had been spared electricity and communications cuts that many media offices suffered that morning, as it shared the grid with many government offices and Parliament. The machines spewed rolls of copy on arrests and interdictions from the bureaus across the country, and some lapsed into silence when power or communications lines were cut. At around 7 a.m., Indira Gandhi came on the All India Radio, then a government-run monopoly on the airwaves, to proclaim the rules of dictatorship. Two government censors, drafted from the government's Press Information Bureau, burst in with two rubber stamps, one for stories censored and another for those approved, and imperiously took seats on the news desk. Later, they marched into other newspaper offices and overpowered journalism. Mirchandani defiantly kept the reports flowing till the censors delivered an ultimatum: Submit to censorship or the agency will be shut down permanently. Mirchandani deferred, but with an order to the staff to continue to cover the news professionally and never to self-censor, anticipating censorship. That was the censors' job, not the reporters', he said. The censors slashed reports to meaninglessness or stamped them "Not for publication". But the reports secretly made their way to the proliferating samizdat, the underground bulletins crudely printed or run on cyclostyle machines, the inky predecessor of copying machines. Some journalists associated with or loyal to the Congress Party or the pro-Mosow Communist Party strutted around giving advice – and veiled threats – to colleagues about the dawning of the new era of Indira Gandhi and there would be no more indiscipline. Outside, a line soon formed of politicians, businessmen, trade unionists, and self-styled civic activists with press releases swearing fealty to the dictator. And in the media, as in all other sectors, many lived up to BJP leader L. K. Advani's pessimistic deecription: "Some who were asked to bend, chose to crawl." Among the editors arrested were Kuldip Nayar, the resident editor of The Statesman, and KR Malkani, the editor of The Motherland, an English-language daily newspaper associated with the Jan Sangh, the precursor of the BJP. A journalist from UNI, SS Prakash, died after he was found with head injuries near the house of the dictator, his scooter with underground tracts. That was the time of fascism – the real fascism, not the fake term flung glibly like foul epithets, often by the intellectual and political progeny of those who put the yoke of fascism on the nation. Those who have sat across from censors on the news desks, watched colleagues in the media and from universities arrested, or saw people snitch on others, know what fascism is like. That was the time in the name of socialism and secularism, the people in the hinterlands were hauled off buses to be sterilised, houses of the poor were demolished for no reason but the aesthetic whims of wielders of power, films were seized and burnt, when upstarts with connections became what were known as 'extra-constitutions authorities'. Let no one, least of all the Congress party, talk of fascism. Except for the BJP, the Marxists, the assorted socialists now scattered in different parties, the DMK and the courageous independents, the others lost their moral ground that day 50 years ago. Yet some of them, like the DMK, are now aligned with the Congress that had imprisoned their leaders. The power of the people and their commitment to democracy had boiled like a river of magma beneath the surface of the facade of untruth to erupt like a volcano searing through the fascism when elections were held by the oblivious dictator. The nation breathed free again after 21 months on March 21, 1977. "Vinaashakaale Viparita Buddhi" is the epitaph for that era of infamy.

Congress May Have Finally Solved Its Tharoor Dilemma In Kerala
Congress May Have Finally Solved Its Tharoor Dilemma In Kerala

NDTV

time24 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Congress May Have Finally Solved Its Tharoor Dilemma In Kerala

The Congress party's victory in Kerala's Nilambur by-election has pretty much sealed the fate of its high-profile dissident Lok Sabha MP from the state capital, Shashi Tharoor. The Thiruvananthapuram MP had deliberately boycotted the campaign on the plea that he was "not invited" to address any rallies. The Congress won anyway, wresting the seat back from the Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI-M) with a handsome margin of more than 11,000 votes. The outcome is a huge morale booster for the Congress, coming as it does a few months before next year's crucial assembly polls, which the party hopes to win and end its losing streak in the state elections that followed the big 2024 battle last summer. The 'Tharoor Effect' The verdict also lays to rest fears of the Tharoor effect in Kerala, because of which the Congress leadership had been handling him with care despite his flirtation with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and his defiant admission of "differences" with his party. One swallow does not make a summer. The win in Nilambur is no guarantee of a state-wide victory for the Congress in Kerala's complex demographic landscape. The next big hurdle for the Congress is the upcoming panchayat polls due towards the end of the year. Five years ago, the CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front (LDF) had swept these elections, paving the way for its stunning second consecutive victory in the assembly face-off that followed a few months later. The LDF is no pushover, and as the numbers in Nilambur show, it put up a strong fight despite the presence of a rebel candidate who cut into its votes. The Congress, therefore, dare not rest on its Nilambur laurels and depend on anti-incumbency - visible in the by-poll - to see it through the panchayat elections first and then the assembly face-off. However, what the Congress party's success in Nilambur has done is to render Tharoor less relevant in its political calculations for both battles. Congress circles are confident that he has lost his damage potential and that going ahead, they can afford to ignore him. The Post-Op Sindoor Outreach Perhaps Tharoor had an inkling of the Nilambur outcome and read the writing on the wall. It is significant that on the morning of the result day, an article penned by him appeared in an English newspaper widely read in the South, in which he called Prime Minister Modi "a prime asset for India on the global stage". The article was ostensibly about the Modi government's post-Op Sindoor outreach, in which Tharoor led one of the seven international delegations that travelled across the world. There, he heaped praises on the Prime Minister for "his energy, dynamism and willingness to engage". In what is being seen as an oblique disapproval of his party's repeated criticism of the government, Tharoor said the PM "deserves greater backing". Congress Indifferent? Perhaps the Congress was busy celebrating its Nilambur win because, for the first time since Tharoor began his campaign to needle his party, regular baiters like Jairam Ramesh did not carp about the fulsome compliments for Modi from one of their own MPs. In fact, few bothered to respond to what Tharoor wrote. This was in sharp contrast to the daily war of words that broke out between Tharoor and his critics in the party, such as Ramesh and Pawan Khera, to name a few, while the Thiruvanthapuram MP was jetting his way around the American continent extolling the virtues of Operation Sindoor. Congress spokespersons lost no opportunity to mock Tharoor, and he responded in kind. The petty level of the exchanges caused much mirth in BJP circles, which could not hide their glee that yet another favourite of the Gandhi family had turned rogue and was giving his party sleepless nights. What's Next? Many in the Congress feel that the Nilambur verdict may be a wake-up call for Tharoor. Is he on the margins of irrelevance in Kerala? Tharoor's main dilemma now is this: he's lost his exalted status in the Congress, and the CPI(M) will not have him. But is the BJP ready to accommodate him, and if yes, in what capacity? At one point, there was speculation that Tharoor would be useful for the BJP to make a breakthrough in Kerala, which has been off-limits to the party since the state's inception despite an active RSS and ABVP presence. Why A BJP Journey Won't Be Smooth There are two difficulties here. One is Tharoor's own diminished stature in the state after he butted heads with his party in Nilambur and came off badly. The other is the BJP's politics. The party ran a polarising campaign in Nilambur, in which it accused both the Congress and the CPI(M) of pandering to Islamic fundamentalists and extremist elements. It had hoped to woo both Hindu and Christian votes in the constituency through high-voltage propaganda. However, voters weren't happy. The BJP's candidate, Mohan George, not only polled marginally fewer votes than in the last election but even lost his security deposit. Congress Gets Some Breathing Space Nilambur is an assembly segment in Priyanka Vadra's Wayanad Lok Sabha constituency. It has been a traditional Congress stronghold, but in the last two assembly elections, the seat was won by the LDF. It is populated by Hindus and Muslims in roughly equal numbers and has a sizable Christian population as well. An initial study of the results suggests the Muslims consolidated in large numbers behind the Congress. The party also retained the support of the Christians. Congress circles hope that if this pattern repeats itself in other parts of Kerala, it will be able to recapture the state after a decade out in the cold. With the Nilambur by-election in the bag, maybe the Congress can finally put the sordid Tharoor saga behind it and concentrate on the challenging panchayat and assembly elections looming ahead. For the party to retain political relevance, it is vital that it wins both polls and proves that it is still a force to reckon with, at least in the southern states.

Parameshwara takes U-turn on Karnataka's fiscal health
Parameshwara takes U-turn on Karnataka's fiscal health

United News of India

time24 minutes ago

  • United News of India

Parameshwara takes U-turn on Karnataka's fiscal health

Bengaluru, Jun 24 (UNI) In a swift volte-face, Karnataka Home Minister and senior Congress leader Dr G Parameshwara on Tuesday retracted his earlier remarks about the state facing a financial crisis, asserting instead that the government has adequate resources for its developmental agenda. Speaking at a public function in Badami on Monday, Parameshwara had seemingly acknowledged the government's cash crunch, stating that Chief Minister Siddaramaiah- who also handles the finance portfolio-lacked funds to implement large-scale developmental works. Speaking at a public event in Badami, Parameshwara stated, 'We must draw up a comprehensive development plan for Badami and send a proposal to the Centre. Let it be a ₹1,000-crore project — that should not deter us. The streets and the entire town need a facelift. This is not just about numbers — if it takes ₹1,000 crore, so be it.' Taking a swipe at the state's fiscal constraint in a lighter vein, the minister said, 'We do not have the money. Siddaramaiah does not have the funds. There is nothing in the treasury. Everything — rice, pulses, even oil — has been distributed already. So now, let us go to the Centre with our hands full of ideas, even if our coffers are empty.' However, less than 24 hours later, addressing a separate public gathering, the Home Minister denied ever making such claims. 'Who said the government doesn't have money? I didn't say that,' he clarified. 'The state has sufficient funds for all planned programs. Yes, there may be some delay in fund disbursal due to procedural issues, but there is no financial crisis.' He further elaborated that a Rs 50 crore development plan was being drawn up for each constituency, with detailed project reports currently under preparation. Taking an indirect dig at BR Patil and Raju Kage's allegations, Parameshwara stated that 'certain MLAs' make 'irresponsible comments' when they face delays in fund allocation. The dramatic reversal has given the opposition BJP fresh ammunition to target the Congress government, accusing it of mismanagement and confusion at the highest levels. The controversy adds to the political turbulence in Karnataka, where questions over resource allocation and developmental priorities continue to dominate the discourse. UNI BDN RKM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store