HRD Minister Lokesh calls on Vice-President, apprises him of NDA government's achievements in Andhra Pradesh
Minister for IT & Human Resources Development Nara Lokesh on Wednesday paid a courtesy visit to Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar in New Delhi.
During the meeting, Mr. Lokesh apprised Mr. Dhankhar of the coalition government's achievements in the last one year, and highlighted various development and welfare programmes being implemented in the State.
He sought Mr. Dhankhar's support in taking the State forward, while pointing out that Andhra Pradesh was poised to be the front-runner in adopting quantum technologies by developing a Quantum Valley in Amaravati.
Asked about the progress of construction of the capital Amaravati, Mr. Lokesh told the Vice- President that works costing about ₹64,000 crore were going on in different stages at a brisk pace.
On the occasion, Mr. Lokesh presented a copy of the coffee-table book on his Yuvagalam to Mr. Dhankhar.
Later, Mr. Lokesh called on Union Ministers Amit Shah (Home), Chirag Paswan (Food Processing Industries) and Dharmendra Pradhan (Education).
In his meeting with Mr. Shah, the HRD Minister highlighted the achievements of the NDA Government, and informed him about the overall situation in the State.
He mentioned that extensive arrangements were made for the International Yoga Day event in Visakhapatnam on June 21, in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a host of other dignitaries would be taking part.
The discussion with Mr. Paswan was focused on the Central government's support for the establishment of food processing units in the State, especially in the Rayalaseema region. Mr. Lokesh explained that farmers in Rayalaseema would extensively cultivate fruits like mango, banana, tomato, sweet lime, pomegranate and dates, but struggle to fetch fair prices. Their situation would improve if the Centre takes necessary market intervention measures.
While promising to extend full support, Mr. Paswan said he would soon visit the State for inaugurating a food processing incubation centre at the IIIT, Tirupati, and would be touring Rayalaseema on July 11 and 12.
Mr. Lokesh told Mr. Pradhan that structural reforms were being implemented to achieve better outcomes, highlighting the Learning Excellence in Andhra Pradesh (LEAP) initiative, which was aimed at improving the education ecosystem. He mentioned that the schools were being given star ratings on the basis of their academic and infrastructure standards.
A new Teacher Transfer Act had been implemented for ensuring promotions and transfers with seniority and merit as the yardsticks.
New universities were being set up under the Center of Excellence initiative, he said. They were Artificial Intelligence University in Visakhapatnam, a Sports University in Amaravati, and India International University of Legal Education and Research, Mr. Lokesh added.
Mr. Lokesh was accompanied by MPs Lavu Sri Krishna Devarayalu, Pemmasani Chandra Sekhar, Kesineni Sivanath, B. Nagaraju, Magunta Srinivasulu Reddy, S. Satish, and Byreddy Shabari.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
35 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Yaduveer: Centre assures steps to resolve Kodagu's drinking water crisis
MP for Mysuru Yaduveer Krishnadatta Chamaraja Wadiyar has said that the Union government has assured prompt action to address the persistent drinking water crisis in Kodagu district. On Thursday, Mr. Wadiyar met Union Jal Shakti Minister C.R. Patil in New Delhi and submitted a memorandum urging early approval for the implementation of Multi-Village Drinking Water Schemes (MVS), aimed at alleviating water scarcity in the rural areas of the Madikeri division. 'Several villages in Kodagu are reeling under drinking water shortages. Immediate approval of the proposed schemes by the Centre is crucial to resolving the issue,' Mr. Yaduveer told reporters after the meeting. He said the Union Minister responded positively to the request and assured that necessary steps would be taken. Mr. Wadiyar he was confident that the water woes of Kodagu's rural population would soon be addressed.

The Wire
an hour ago
- The Wire
'Time Not Far Away When People Speaking in English in this Country Will Feel Ashamed': Amit Shah
Shah added that while he is aware of the difficulties in reclaiming the prominence of Indian languages but he has full faith in Indian society that it will win the battle. New Delhi: Union home minister Amit Shah on Thursday (June 19) claimed that the time is not far away when people speaking in English in the country will 'feel ashamed.' Speaking at the launch of the book Main Boond Swayam, Khud Sagar Hoon by IAS officer Ashutosh Agnihotri, Shah said that India "cannot be imagined" with foreign languages, as one cannot understand one's history, culture and religion in an alien language. "Remember what I say and listen to me carefully. Time is not far away for a society where people speaking in English in this country feel ashamed. The languages of our country are the jewels of our culture. Without them, we are not cannot be imagined with a foreign language," said Shah, reported Deccan Herald. Shah added that while he is aware of the difficulties in reclaiming the prominence of Indian languages but he has full faith in Indian society that it will win the battle. "With pride in our languages, we will run our country, ideate, research, make decisions and lead the world too. There is no need for anyone to doubt languages will greatly contribute to us being at the top of the world in 2047," said Shah. Later, Pratik Sinha, Co-founder and editor of Alt News said in posts on X that while several publications had run the video of Shah's statements about those speaking in English feeling ashamed in the future, many of these posts were later deleted by the publications. Times of India and NDTV have also deleted their posts below. — Pratik Sinha (@free_thinker) June 19, 2025 Sinha said in this posts that the publications which deleted the news and video related to Shah's statements included Asian News International (ANI), Times of India and NDTV. "A change in government did not bother anyone but when someone tried to touch our religion, culture and literature, our society stood against them and defeated them. Literature is the soul of our society," Shah also said during the event, said the DH report. During the event, Shah said that administrative officers are rarely trained to introduce empathy in the system and a 'radical change' is needed in their training. "When change becomes a mass movement, it becomes a revolution. Today, we can see this change in our country...I believe that by 2047, our journey of change will bring back our country's glory," said Shah. The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments.


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
Tamil Nadu Minister says Google app enough, slams Hindi imposition in schools
Tamil Nadu Education Minister Anbil Mahesh Poyyamozhi on Thursday reiterated the state government's opposition to the imposition of Hindi, arguing that language learning must remain a matter of choice, not compulsion. Referring to a recent controversy in Karnataka, where around 90,000 students reportedly failed their examinations due to the imposition of Hindi, the Minister questioned the logic behind forcing students to study a language they may not choose the necessity of learning Hindi for translation or communication purposes in the modern era, he said, 'We want to make our children scientists, architects, doctors. But they want to make them translators, for which a Google app is enough.' He argued that mobile technology now provides easy access to real-time translation, making it unnecessary to 'toil and study for a year' just to understand or speak another language. 'There is a difference between option and compulsion. If you are compelled to study, do not accept it,' the Minister said while speaking at a public function. He invoked the words of DMK founder CN Annadurai, who, in 1967, had declared that development should not come at the cost of linguistic imposition. 'Anna said imposing is different from educating. He said that if they say you can only develop if you learn Hindi, we do not need such development,' Anbil Mahesh Minister stated that Tamil Nadu's stand has always been to encourage multilingual learning, as long as it remains voluntary. 'Learn as many languages as you want. Learn all the 22 languages in the 8th Schedule. But do not impose,' he remarks come in the wake of continuing resistance in Tamil Nadu against the push for Hindi under the Union government's National Education Policy (NEP), which has faced criticism for allegedly promoting a one-language agenda. The Minister's comments also reflect the DMK government's long-standing policy of two-language education and its emphasis on linguistic pride and regional identity. IN THIS STORY#Tamil Nadu